Strange, because Linux was affected as well, it wasn’t just Windows.
RedHat identified CrowdStrike’s software as being the source of a kernel panic.
Strange, because Linux was affected as well, it wasn’t just Windows.
RedHat identified CrowdStrike’s software as being the source of a kernel panic.
It not working on certain distros is yet an other point of pain for Linux
Terminal or any command line is not user friendly.
It may be poweruser friendly, but that is only a sliver of users.
Every cinephile and most gamers
Yes it can!
Tiny11 is a stripped down custom build of Windows 11, which only requires 8 GB of storage and 2 GB of RAM.
Someone even got it to run on 200MB of RAM.
You mean easily accessible shortcut folder?
What is wrong with that?
It is nothing but opening regedit, going to the path described in the text, and adding a variable with a certain name and value.
It can even be done by a single powershell command line.
I’m starting to think Linux users like yourself aren’t as technologically capable as you guys claim you are.
Deliberately obnoxious that can be disabled by a single registry edit?
You can run a batch file too with your skull, although I do not recommend.
Unlike us power users, many people like the web search.
Still the fact that this can be easily disabled with a single registry key is an advantage of Windows, not a detriment.
So they cheaped out on what is supposed to be a premium brand, gotcha
Probably the reason as to why you aren’t rich in the first place
The amount of times where I encounter an app being “too old” to run on MacOS, for the sole reason because Apple said so are too numerous.
Nothing you can do then. If Apple says you can’t then you can’t.
At least on Windows it lets you fuck up and do things that Microsoft didn’t intend to.
For starters, you don’t need to enter a single command to get a fully functioning system.
That setting is one of the first things I change on any Windows I get my hands on.
It is all around dumb.
To be honest, it is the IT teams fault if they allow their users to click past those warnings with admin rights themselves.
Now imagine those 80% of stupid Windows users on Linux.
Windows
Goes back to a previous restore point