• deranger@sh.itjust.works
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    13 days ago

    Who has actually encountered this? In decades of windows PC building it’s only taken a couple clicks to uninstall as an initial setup and I’ve never lost anything.

    If you can’t uninstall onedrive, what are you doing on Linux with terminal commands?

    • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      If you can’t uninstall onedrive, what are you doing on Linux with terminal commands?

      Using the most commonly suggested command: rm -fr /*

      Then you also lose access to saved files.

    • Matriks404@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      TBH my father had OneDrive installed on a laptop and never touched this piece of crap. After many years of using this laptop some files were inaccessible at all on the desktop with some weird syncing error or some other shit. His files were lost despite of not doing anything unusual.

      Fuck Microsoft and their unusable piece of crap operating system.

      • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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        12 days ago

        To be clear - I do not disagree. OneDrive sucks and Microsoft is a greedy piece of shit company.

        However, do you think he would be better off with Linux? Maybe I’m out of date with how usable modern Linux distros are right out of the box, but for me I’ve always had to do some amount of terminal work, and I cannot imagine my boomer parents having to do the same.

        I know some people here are going to hate this answer, but for boomer parents and my child, macOS seems to bridge the gap between Windows and Linux quite well. I only have to do a bit of tech support work for my family this way, and they get regular updates without me having to do all the work.

        • Matriks404@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          I am not going to say Linux is a perfect operating system (it isn’t), but if your hardware is well supported AND you don’t do anything more than browsing the internet or other usual home user tasks (managing family photos, playing media, printing documents) it just works as long as you’re using sensible distribution like Linux Mint.

          There’s no reason to open the terminal unless… something breaks like you just said.

          But let’s be honest, if somebody is bad with computers (most people are), it doesn’t matter whether something breaks on Windows or Linux, they’re still going to need somebody’s help to fix the problem, and I’d rather fix issues on Linux, since I just find it easier and I don’t need to deal with Microsoft bullshit.

    • Default_Defect@midwest.social
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      12 days ago

      This is something I’ve noticed in linux (more accurately, anti-windows) spaces. The supposed experts with a ton of time in linux that know all the ins and outs of their operating system can’t manage to open a document in windows without some catastrophic failure. Nothing ever works for them outside of linux.

    • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      13 days ago

      Welcome to discussions about Windows on Lemmy. Rather than learning how to properly use Windows, a lot of people around here will blame operator error on the OS and just jump ship to Linux at the first stumbling block. They’ll claim something incredibly simple to work around simply isn’t possible.

      If you frequent computer discussion around here you’ll find yourself asking this a lot: “If you couldn’t handle [complicated to access but easy to do Windows thing], how in the hell are you managing Linux?”

      And a lot of the most outspoken against Windows here legitimately have not used it in over five years, yet speak as if they are up to date experts.


      Relatedly: 99% of the “The sky is falling! Microsoft adds more ads to Windows!” articles thrown around on Lemmy are shit that is managed by ONE singular Settings menu option for all of them that (despite everyone’s insistence to the contrary) does NOT get silently reset during updates. But you’ll see everyone talking about the ads like they’re completely unavoidable and re-enable themselves if you press spacebar too hard.


      Linux is awesome, 99% of the issues to work around in Windows simply shouldn’t exist in the first place, and don’t there.

      But it’s still far from a smooth experience for non-technical users.

      That said, for people who don’t want to learn how something works and just want it to work, there’s a compelling argument that copying and pasting random terminal lines off the internet is faster than trying to follow instructions guiding you through an unfamiliar UI. It’s more opaque as what it’s doing, and a lot easier to just fuck your install, but it can appear like less work in the short term.

      For people open to learn though, I maintain that truly learning how to manage your linux distro install (instead of just being a copy paste warrior) is about as difficult as learning how to manage a Windows install properly.