Microsoft will unveil the next version of Windows on June 24th - What's next after Windows 10?

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They haven't "decided to commit suicide". They want to push hardware DRM in order to clamp down on piracy. No joke. You cannot watch 4k Netflix on a linux for this reason.
Once they make it standard in 10 years or so, the idea is piracy is dead. Now, that's a big optimism rating right there, but for the moment 4k Netflix rips are rare. But they'll figure out something. Probably by jacking into the HDMI feed. Can't kill the Hydra, as always.
Pretty easy workaround for that. Get one of those cheapo Roku set top boxes with Netflix preinstalled and run its HDMI output to a capture card and voila. Record the stream like the good old days of recording game footage. Though at the moment I think sailors of the seven seas can somehow directly download the stream? Not sure cause netflix and webrips are so plentiful.
 
The kind of support LTSC will be under will not be the support you imagine. Hardware support will be nonexistent after 2025 and as for games you can forget about it
Which is good, because at this point you shouldn't be planning to invest in a Windows machine and keep upgrading it.
 
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Pretty easy workaround for that. Get one of those cheapo Roku set top boxes with Netflix preinstalled and run its HDMI output to a capture card and voila. Record the stream like the good old days of recording game footage. Though at the moment I think sailors of the seven seas can somehow directly download the stream? Not sure cause netflix and webrips are so plentiful.

So a big bank will let you download yout statements in pdf, but the back end puts some stupid password on them, so when I tried to merge different pages from different months i couldnt. I called the bank and asked what the password was.

Their answer was they didnt know it was something adobe did and they dont understand their back end.

que me researching how to break the password.....then my co worker gets the pdf compiled I asked him what the password was.

The little fucker just printed the pdf to pdf....
 
So a big bank will let you download yout statements in pdf, but the back end puts some stupid password on them, so when I tried to merge different pages from different months i couldnt. I called the bank and asked what the password was.

Their answer was they didnt know it was something adobe did and they dont understand their back end.

que me researching how to break the password.....then my co worker gets the pdf compiled I asked him what the password was.

The little fucker just printed the pdf to pdf....
That's hilarious and brilliant. Occam's Razor type workarounds
 
So I've bought a new computer a while ago and was debating buying office, but I noticed that it didn't work for anything but Windows 10, and I wondered if it's going to be incompatible with Windows 11 in an effort to push the subscription based service.
 
So I've bought a new computer a while ago and was debating buying office, but I noticed that it didn't work for anything but Windows 10
Office 2016 works on any reasonably-modern version of Windows and is nearly identical to 2019. But yes, at this point I would use LibreOffice on any new installs unless you have a specific need for Microsoft's product.
 
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Office 2016 works on any reasonably-modern version of Windows and is nearly identical to 2019. But yes, at this point I would use LibreOffice on any new installs unless you have a specific need for Microsoft's product.
If you deal with courts and other boomer-run institutions, they often require not just Microsoft Word generally, but specific versions. Of the ones that require specific versions, the most recent version I'm allowed to use is 2007. And the only fonts I'm allowed to use are Times New Roman and Courier New.
 
So I've bought a new computer a while ago and was debating buying office, but I noticed that it didn't work for anything but Windows 10, and I wondered if it's going to be incompatible with Windows 11 in an effort to push the subscription based service.
Alright I get shitting on MS is cool but let's not get retarded with the conspiracy theories. I just had to install and crack a copy of Office 2019 and the official ISOs even included the latest updates that make it look even more in line with W11, and also both 2021 and an LTSC have been confirmed for later this year.

As much as I like Libreoffice, MSOffice is a fuckin' fact of life.
 
At this point what the heck should i use as OS? I can use Linux for "important stuff" but i cant run some games and programs i use for hobbies. Tips? Is there a modified win 7 or something i can grab?
 
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At this point what the heck should i use as OS? I can use Linux for "important stuff" but i cant run some games and programs i use for hobbies. Tips? Is there a modified win 7 or something i can grab?
Use Wine if you switch to Linux. Be aware, it is not foolproof. Many programs do not work or suffer frequent crashes.
 
Use Wine if you switch to Linux. Be aware, it is not foolproof. Many programs do not work or suffer frequent crashes.
That is why i used word "some" :(
Its always one or two programs that i miss that you cant really find replacement for in linux. Although open source alternatives are god sent.

Im worried about getting win 10 for many reasons but now mainly win 11 shilling to come. Dont want to reinstall whole os just bc update files downloaded incorrectly
 
At this point what the heck should i use as OS? I can use Linux for "important stuff" but i cant run some games and programs i use for hobbies
I think the smart play at this point is to get Windows 10 LTSC 2019 (to lock in a stable platform till 2029) but get Linux up and running as well. I suspect there's always going to be a thing or two that'll require you to dual-boot Windows or have it in a VM.
 
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Windows 11 is the COVID-19 vaccine for your PC​

Vast segments of the PC population are unprotected. Upgrade your hardware and get the shot.
We all know that one person who means well and has good intentions but doesn't have the best communication skills. Perhaps, it's a politician or a world leader that you know. They'll tell you to do something because it's for your own good and that if you don't do it voluntarily, there's an imminent danger that bad things will happen.

For example, if you do not get your COVID-19 vaccine, and you do not wear a mask in public places, with this new Delta variant, you stand a very good chance of becoming infected, possibly very ill with long-standing effects, and maybe become hospitalized and even die.

And at the very least, even if you don't become ill, even if you are asymptomatic, you can become an active spreader of something that can potentially harm many other people, possibly those who are close to you.

Getting your COVID-19 vaccine is called being proactive. Wearing your mask is acting responsibly.

We don't always like listening to people of authority, especially when we are asked to do something that doesn't have immediately visible, tangible benefits. Doing things proactively, such as getting a COVID-19 vaccine and wearing a mask, requires having faith in someone being supplied with superior knowledge and expertise, such as a world leader or public health expert.

However, as we know, not everyone in a position of authority and possessing subject matter expertise is so polished they can package a message like this and make it palatable to every end-user.

With its Windows 11 rollout, Microsoft is not entirely different from that unpolished world leader or politician. Its communication skills have left room for improvement related to this significant and critical Windows upgrade. That's something I think everyone covering this industry can agree on.

We know it means well, we know it has the expertise, but people will still challenge it and get all huffy when they are being told that Windows 11 is an essential upgrade related to securing the PC platform from advanced malware threats.

But to take advantage of the new security capabilities that shield you from these threats, your PC hardware needs to be able to support it. And that is not a message people want to hear.

Unfortunately, many legacy PCs, regardless of what antivirus solutions they may run and regardless of how functional and how fast they still run their application workloads, are highly vulnerable to these threats. And as they are not eligible for the Windows 11 upgrade, they are effectively immunocompromised.

Just like getting a COVID-19 vaccine and wearing a mask is proactive, so are the architectural changes required to upgrade to Windows 11. And in some cases, implementing those is going to need investment in new PC hardware. It will also require investing in further training and, potentially, some new deployment tools. It's going to cost some money.

But as we know, implementing security changes in your large organization, small business, and consumer space is also not easy to sell. Anything that helps ensure business continuity and strengthen security resiliency from a threat that isn't immediately visible will fall on deaf ears to all but the most cautious and conservative IT organizations, let alone end-users.

How many companies or individuals have we encountered as professionals that run their environments with no or untested backups, haven't run a complete continuity and DR test in years, and then get burned for it? I mean, how many people did we know that ran with no antivirus or firewall for years before it was built into the foundational IT infrastructure because they didn't want to pay for it or just felt it was a nuisance? I have dozens of stories as a former IT architect and consultant over my 30-year career to tell for this.

It's tough to sell hardened security or any form of protection as the defining feature to the entire user population. So Windows 11 is also being released with an exciting new user interface to entice them to upgrade, whether by opting-in on hardware that can already accommodate the new OS or upgrading to new PCs.

Is this going to cost money to most organizations? Yes. Are a lot of end-user PCs going to need upgrades, costing people money? Yes. Spending money is painful, especially if we are talking about an upgrade to something strictly preventative in nature.

But do you know what is even more painful? A compromise -- one which results in reputation loss, such as a publicly visible one that gets your organization on the news, such as a ransomware attack that holds all your IT assets hostage and stops your business cold for days.

Such an attack makes you and your company look stupid for not remediating it when it could have been prevented.

Best case scenario in this situation? Your customers think you're a bunch of incompetent idiots. Worst case? Business-ending event.

The good news is that, like the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines, you can get the first "shot" now. If your hardware supports the new secure boot, virtualization-based security (VBS), and Hypervisor-protected Code Integrity (Memory Integrity/Core Isolation) you can turn it on in Windows 10 today.

And when Windows 11 arrives in October or November, get that second shot. And if any of your systems aren't eligible, replace them. Immediately. Because that's the proactive and responsible thing to do.

Replace all your computers, wear the mask, and get the vaccines!
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Better get my soldering practice in. I already know I'll just stay in the abusive relationship with Windows because gaming. Proton is said to be great, but me lazy.
Depends on what you play. If you do a lot of online gaming, check the games you play to see how they hold up on linux. If you are more a single player type, linux is actually pretty good for gaming. Its online that has issues, offline shit seems very simple (as in, you install it, it runs, no different from a windows experience).

The day VST/i's work on linux, is the day I fuck off windows entirely.
 
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