this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2025
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No Stupid Questions

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This became relevant specially after 2023

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[–] golden_zealot@lemmy.ml 5 points 56 minutes ago* (last edited 51 minutes ago)

I switched due to the following problems with Windows and benefits with Linux:

  • Recall, the most privacy invasive software I have ever seen being spun as a "feature" which was shown to be insecure as well. It used to be that if you didn't pay for something, it meant you were the product. Now Microsoft wants you to pay them to be their product.
  • Fucking ads everywhere in the OS itself
  • It's slow as all hell
  • I would try to do something as simple in the UI such as hitting "Sleep" and Windows 11 wouldn't do anything until the 4th click
  • Windows no longer has a monopoly on games or music software - proton and DAW's like bitwig should now be forcing Microsoft to compete to make their OS better, but because capitalism doesn't work, they don't, and so I have no reason to stay with their OS
  • Linux is fast as fuck. Games like Armored Core VI and Death Stranding run better in an emulated state on Linux for me than they do natively on Windows because Linux isn't running 1500 telemetry tasks at all times.
  • Linux gives you choices of window managers. Don't like the UI in Windows? Tough luck. Don't like a UI in Linux? Change it in 2 seconds if you're using KDE Plasma, or switch to another WM like Gnome, XFCE, Cinnamon, etc so that the computer works the way you want. You want to have some WM functionality only sometimes that no one WM offers? Install 3 WM's, choose which one you want when you log in. Make the computer work for you.

On Windows 11 the final absolute last straw for me was when it stopped installing updates for me and gave me this:

So I couldn't even trust the system was secure anymore.

Windows is stagnated because all of their development focus has turned away from making a competitive OS with good and useful features for the end user, and instead focuses now on how to get more dollars out of each minor action a user could possibly take when using it. Linux just feels more modern, more powerful, more useful, more secure, faster, prettier, cleaner, and cheaper than Windows now because it is 98% of the time.

[–] lightnsfw@reddthat.com 7 points 2 hours ago

Because things aren't improving. Windows 11 is a bloated buggy mess loaded with privacy issues. They change things that have been working fine for years or decades or introduce new features that no one asked for and only get in the way and they don't even test the changes properly to get bugs out. It's clear they do not have users interests in mind and things are only getting worse as time goes on. The ship is sinking and Linux is the only lifeboat available.

[–] BlackPenguins@lemmy.world 13 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago)

Windows 11 has a massive keylogger built in. For decades we associated them with malware and now Windows is trying to normalize it as "good for the user."

They say it's off by default. But that's like me having the detonation for a nuke casually sitting on my desk. Sure I could just not hit the button but I don't want that shit in the same zip code as me.

[–] The_Decryptor@aussie.zone 13 points 7 hours ago

I switched a year ago, after trying and failing multiple times over the years whenever I gave it a try.

  1. Linux has massively improved, systemd is a lot cleaner than the mess of disparate shell scripts it displaced. Network Manager is also a lot nicer now than I remember it being when it was first introduced into Red Hat.
  2. Windows hasn't, in a lot of ways it was actually regressing. I used to get multiple shell crashes a week with no insight as to why, friends would claim it was just me but then receive an update and start having similar crashes. Also noticeable UI issues that went unfixed for multiple revisions, made it felt cheap.
  3. MS went all in on AI garbage and was jamming it into everything, kept getting popup notifications and the like to try Copilot, notifications went from being useful to just being an ad delivery mechanism.
  4. Gaming on Linux massively improved, last time I tried it OpenGL support was a mess. Now OpenGL is very mature, and all the D3D translation stuff uses Vulkan which has been rock solid for me. I've found games run better than they did on Windows on the same hardware, and the only game I've had an issue with was Destiny 2, which is intentional on the devs behalf (Luckily the game's boring now)

I find I'm a lot more willing to let issues slide though, like I've had some Thunar crashes which I'm cool with since there's like 4 devs maintaining it, vs. the multi-billion dollar company working on Explorer which I expect better from. Also unsurprisingly the only actual shop-stopper issue I've had was with a memory leak in the Nvidia drivers, the actual FLOSS stuff has been great.

[–] Bwaz@lemmy.world 24 points 10 hours ago

Copilot. Win11 working only on mew hardware. Win10 going out of support. Basic bloated operation with little concern for what users want.

[–] FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 21 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

You're in a linux loving, windows hating bubble here on Lemmy. There is no significant number of people migrating from windows to linux according to any metric we have.

[–] rfr_Foglia@feddit.it 6 points 8 hours ago (1 children)
[–] pathief@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago)

But according to PornHub... so is Windows

[–] vane@lemmy.world 15 points 13 hours ago

Because Valve showed people that linux is not so bad after all. Might be also that people can ask ChatGPT for help and Microsoft is financing it's own funeral.

[–] JTskulk@lemmy.world 30 points 15 hours ago

The short version is 2 reasons:

  • Microsoft requires Windows 11 computers to have special new hardware that not all computers have. Security updates for Windows 10 ends in 3 months. Many people are faced with a choice of buying a new computer, or installing Linux on their current one to save money. Others realize how much Windows 11 sucks shit and switch because Linux is better.
  • Gaming on Linux has gotten a lot better recently. For many people, this was the main thing holding them back. Software support in general is better than ever.
[–] Jankatarch@lemmy.world 16 points 16 hours ago

Because windows won't do with old laptops and 3 years is apparently enough to consider a laptop old nowadays.

[–] HuntressHimbo@lemmy.zip 66 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago) (1 children)

There are a few different factors. I think the biggest is that the lifecycle for windows 10 is ending. Microsoft is pushing the upgrade, but 11 has Recall which is essentially AI spyware. Many folks are trying to push Linux instead of upgrading when support is fully cut off

[–] Quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world 2 points 39 minutes ago* (last edited 26 minutes ago) (1 children)

This is the top-voted answer, but it's missing one key point: Windows 11 mandates a TPM chip, a secure cryptographic processor that (amongst other things, both good and bad) allows an OS to verify that its boot files haven't been tampered with.

A lot of old computers don't have this chip, making this the first Windows edition in many years where the upgrade process isn't smooth and painless. If you don't have this chip you straight-up can't install Windows 11 on that machine without using hacks or workarounds, workarounds that Microsoft have been actively patching out to prevent TPM-less installs.

Rather than throw away their still perfectly fine computers to buy a new machine they don't need - for a dubious "upgrade" they don't even want - a lot of users are choosing to switch to Linux so they can keep their current PCs while still enjoying software and security updates.

[–] Quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world 2 points 25 minutes ago* (last edited 16 minutes ago)

It also helps that the Steam Deck has introduced a bunch of people to Linux and shown that it's not so scary or user-unfriendly these days, plus Valve's extensive investments into WINE/Proton (software that allows you to run Windows programs and games on Linux) mean that for the first time, running Linux doesn't mean limiting your library of usable apps.

At this point Linux actually runs many games better than Windows due to lower overhead, and most things will run without issue so long as they don't rely on kernel-level rootkits for anti-cheat or DRM (and kernel access is being restricted in future Windows updates after that whole CloudStrike fiasco, so that will likely stop being an issue either way as programs move away from using it).

[–] Feyd@programming.dev 26 points 18 hours ago

The fact they keep trying harder and harder to make me switch off a local account is reason enough.

[–] ItsComplicated@sh.itjust.works 49 points 20 hours ago (9 children)

I can only answer why I dropped Windows. I wasn’t going to pay a company to force AI spyware onto my system, ignore my commands with every update that negated them, or hold my data hostage if I didn’t jump through their endless hoops; all to claim my data as theirs with their end goal being to charge me more money for accessing what is supposed to be mine in the first place!

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[–] nemo@piefed.social 61 points 21 hours ago (48 children)

Windows 10 is no longer receiving security updates

Not all machines that ran W10 are capable of running W11

W11 is full of AI integration, always-on data collection, and other no-sell bloatware

Linux is easier to use than ever and free

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[–] Supervisor194@lemmy.world 12 points 16 hours ago

For me it's because it seems evident that Microsoft wants Windows to be saas and here's the thing: I don't like Windows that much. For over 20 years now, I've preferred Linux for server stuff and Mac for daily driver stuff, I've only tolerated Windows, mainly for gaming.

Since Windows 7 died (I skipped 8 altogether and reluctantly have been dealing with 10 with lots of hacks to keep it locked down), I have only been barely tolerating it - and games were the sole reason.

Well, Proton has now obliterated that, conveniently right as Microsoft has decided that what people REALLY need is for them to be 100% shit. I refuse to install 11. So I'm out.

[–] trinsec@piefed.social 20 points 20 hours ago (3 children)

Windows 10 is about to be end-of-life this October. You probably think 'just update your OS to Windows 11', but many computers are deemed unfit for Windows 11 by Microsoft.

In order to move on to Windows 11, many people, and I do really mean a ridiculously large amount of people would need to buy a new computer or laptop. In the meantime their old systems are still fit for everyday use, so there is quite a lot of e-waste coming up.

Instead of just dumping the old computers you can just put Linux on them and continue using them. Linux costs nothing, just time. So if you don't have specialized software which absolutely must have Windows, you might as well just switch to Linux and keep using your old systems which are still perfectly fine for your everyday needs.


My old gaming laptop that I still use right now is from 2018. It does have the TPM 2.0 chip that Windows 11 requires, but its CPU is like just one generation too old for it. So, what do I do? When Windows 10 stops getting its updates, throw it away? Naw man, Linux will work. You can even game on Linux just fine as the Steam Deck has proven already, so I'll just switch my sweet laptop over to Linux and continue using it as usual.

It's still kinda crazy to me that a seventh gen i5 (still very capable for general use) and i7 (still a very good processor for pretty much everything) are considered "incompatible" with Windows 11.

Good thing the OS is trash though. My laptop supports it but I'll be damned if I upgrade. Just switched to Linux as my main OS with Windows running on a separate drive for shit anticheat games I can't quit.

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[–] MushuChupacabra@lemmy.world 16 points 20 hours ago

Because Microsoft insists on treating its users with contempt.

With Linux, you don't need to replace your computer if it is capable of running Windows 10. For many, hardware upgrades are a requirement if they wish to stick with Microsoft. Installing a Linux distro will extend the life cycle of an older machine, at no cost.

That's too much value at zero personal cost to ignore.

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