
One is yet to find the reason for which Linuxfags willingly go into Windows related threads and shit their pants when people talk about Windows in a positive way. Oddly enough it's okay to derail Windows threads this way, even derailing the thread to kvetch about some personal grudge against a user, but not when it comes to Linux threads, then the jannies suddenly care about being disruptive.
Come to think of it. Double standards? Forcing yourself in spaces you don't belong? Man, so
that's the reason why they call it Troonix.
By the way, thanks a fucking lot
@T-21. The last thing this thread needed was feature tourists.
Hey, thanks for the pointer, just ran MAS. I'm pretty behind the times and haven't had a word processor for years now, and could use some help. Is Office365 the only game in town? Or are there builds of Word out there that I could run with this? Sorry for being a lazy nigger.
You can either patch Office 365 with MAS or download Office 2024 which is the old school form of Office, local installation with a volumetric license. Microsoft was planning to ditch those but enterprise clients bitched about 365 enough that they've decided to release another permanent release instead of forcing them the rolling subscription one.
I have to deal with old DRM like securom that does not work, they ripped the support out.
The reason SecuROM support was ripped out was because it was
notorious for breaking Windows installations. Mind you, this wasn't Microsoft's fault but Sony's, the same wonderful corporation that brought you
system destroying rootkits disguised as Audio CD DRM.
Thing is, if you want to play these old games, be it Windows or Linux, you'll have to fiddle with it a bit. The only benefit Lutris has is that it pre-packages all the little tweaks and patches you'd need to run those games, but if you were to do it manually it'll take an equal amount of elbow grease.
1. Old broken DRM like SecuROM.
GameCopyWorld is the ol' reliable for those.
2. Patches. The Library of Alexandria relating to those is
PC Gaming Wiki. People catalogue all the possible issues and fixes to them to any and all games with instructions for you to follow. It may be that it's a game from the DirectDraw era where Microsoft partially broke it with subsequent Windows versions where you have to drop in a wrapper DLL, or it's a game that has such a bad implementation of DirectX that DXVK magically solves it's problems on modern systems, or perhaps the game itself is a buggy pile of shit for which the community made dedicated patches to fix any and all issues as well as up the graphical fidelity. PCGW will tell you all about it, just look up the game you're looking for. They also document other technical aspects like 3rd party tools like
Special K, or explaining various concepts like
anti-aliasing,
display wrappers and so on.
Worth noting that the
Emulation General Wiki also partially covers wrappers, though it's the PCGW equivalent of emulation. If you want to emulate, EmuGen wiki will give you all the answers.
Of course, if you can get it on GOG, get it on GOG, or pirate the GOG version. CD Projekt makes sure that the games offered there will "just werk" on modern Windows, sometimes adding patches that are exclusive to the GOG versions. Lest we forget GOG was originally called "Good Old Games" and their entire schtick from the beginning was offering old, forgotten games without DRM and patched to work on modern systems.