Comment by autoexec

2 days ago

Even collecting and sending all that data to the cloud is going to drain battery life. I'd really rather my devices only do what I ask them to than have AI running the background all the time trying to be helpful or just silently collecting data.

Copilot is just ChatGPT as an app.

If you don't use it, it will have no impact on your device. And it's not sending your data to the cloud except for anything you paste into it.

  • So, the new AI features like recall don’t exist?

    Windows is going more and more into AI and embedding it into the core of the OS as much as it can. It’s not “an app”, even if that was true now it wouldn't be true for very long. The strategy is well communicated.

>> I'd really rather my devices only do what I ask them to

Linux hears your cry. You have a choice. Make it.

  • Unfortunately still loads of hurdles for most people.

    AAA Games with anti-cheat that don't support Linux.

    Video editing (DaVinci Resolve exists but is a pain to get up and running on many distros, KDenLive/OpenShot don't really cut it for most)

    Adobe Suite (Photoshop/Lightroom specifically, and Premiere for Video Editing) - would like to see Affinity support Linux but hasn't happened so far. GIMP and DarkTable aren't really substitutions unless you pour a lot of time into them.

    Tried moving to Linux on my laptop this past month, made it a month before a reinstall of Windows 11. Had issues with WiFi chip (managed to fix but had to edit config files deep in the system, not ideal), Fedora with LUKS encryption after a kernel update the keyboard wouldn't work to input the encryption key, no Windows Hello-like support (face ID). Had the most success with EndeavourOS but running Arch is a chore for most.

    It's getting there, best it's ever been, but there's still hurdles.

    • > AAA Games with anti-cheat that don't support Linux.

      I really don't understand people that want to play games so badly that they are willing to install a literal rootkit on their devices. I can understand if you're a pro gamer but it feels stupid to do it otherwise.

      3 replies →

    • According to my friends, Arc Raders works well on linux. So it's very much, just a small selection of AAA games, so they can run anti-cheat, that probably doesn't even work. Can you name a triple a you want to play, that proton says is incompatible?

      Gimp isn't a solution, sure but it works for what I need. Darktable does way more than I've ever wanted, so I can forgive it for the one time it crashed. Inkscape and blender both exceed my needs as well.

      And Adobe is so user hostile, that I feel I need to call you a mean name to prove how I feel.... dummy!

      Yes, I already feel bad, and I'm sorry. But trolling aside, listing applications that treat users like shit, aren't reasons to stay on the platform that also treats you like shit.

      I get it, sometimes, being treated like shit is worth it because it's easier now that you're used to being disrespected. But an aversion to the effort it'd take for you to climb the learning curve of something different, isn't valid reason to help the disrespectful trash companies making the world worse, recruit more people for them to treat like trash.

      Just because you use it, doesn't make it worth recommending.

      3 replies →

  • Part of me is starting to think Valve is going to be the best thing to happen to Linux (in this regard) since Ubuntu.