33 comments

  • wing-_-nuts 3 hours ago
    I have windows on my desktop pc because it's easier to get executable mods (downgraders, engine fixes, etc) working on windows than linux. There's also the matter of 'kernel level anti-cheat' games not working.

    But if I just judge windows vs linux, on even ground, W11 is painful. I've main'd linux on my laptop for ~ 25 years. There was a time when it was a jank experience that I put up with for better devex, but that ended in the late 00's. From that point forward, unless you were trying to get bleeding edge hardware to work, linux has been hands down better.

    It's enough that I've considered giving up online play all together just to have a nicer computing experience.

    • californical 3 hours ago
      I just run two drives - one with windows and one with Linux.

      I treat the windows one as a console essentially, not even logged into my password manager or email or anything. It is only for games. Basically an Xbox, with all sorts of normal annoying UX, but it doesn’t matter for all of the ~2 minutes until I can launch a game

      Separate linux drive for everything else.

      • ghighi7878 2 hours ago
        I have a windows machine connected to my TV for games. Thats it. 1000 Euro machine with 500 Euro GPU. Also use it for govts windows only thingies.
        • dathinab 2 hours ago
          Similar for me but I mostly play single player small studio games/no mods, and on Steam/Linux there are enough "out of the box working" games to fill all the time I still have left for gaming.

          It's not perfect, but I anyway had the computer for other reasons and may need it for the other reasons again after which I would need to re-setup anything. Bazite default/w. SteamOS UI install + a minor number of setting changes (1) and a login to steam and it's ready to go again. Can't complain. Just which the SteamOS UI version would also do the same background download+apply of updates the main versions or distros like Fedora Silverblue do.

          While not quite yet console experience, for many games it really is not "that" far away. (For some other games very much very far away, don't expect any competitive PvP games or games with real world money related online economy working. To some degree it's not even about anti-cheat not working on Linux. It's about many such games struggling making it work on Windows and having no room to bother with another platform, and dishonest managers potentially using "all Linux fault" as an excuse when the anti-cheating strategy failed on Windows where most of their players where... (happened before))

          --

          (1): Mainly SteamOS UI is made for Handhelds and as such has some bad defaults for more powerful desktops (which likely will change soon). I'm only couch gaming on it, hence close to everything else just stays with default settings. Sure it's not fancy customized Linux or most maximal privacy preserving Linux. But it's in the "good enough" area of settings, privacy and similar, which Windows in many aspects isn't anymore. No fighting windows forcing things down your throat, weather it's Copilot, the nasty way it tries to deceive you into using it's online drive, etc.

          ---

          Oh and as minor tip: You can majorly micro optimize kernels, schedulers, drivers etc. If you don't need to, then don't bother. That is where unexpected perf. regressions, issues after updates etc. come in. Like you still find reports about Bazzite being slower then windows due to them having don that in the past and having run into an unexpected perf. regression on some hardware without realizing. I mean it is fun to tinker. But I'm in the "please mostly just work" age by now.

      • wing-_-nuts 2 hours ago
        That's ...not the dumbest idea I've ever heard. Now I just have to wait till prices come down on ssds again. While I can of course afford it, it wounds my soul to pay the AI / tariff tax on components.
        • GeoAtreides 1 hour ago
          > Now I just have to wait till prices come down on ssds again

          oh man, do I have some really bad news for you:

          https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/chart/SNDK

        • fhd2 2 hours ago
          I typically install both systems on the same disk, different partitions. Then work with additional SSDs strictly for game storage. Only annoying bit is that some games _need_ to be on C, but very few in my experience. If you have enough space to shrink your Windows partition, that could work without waiting for an SSD. Though I guess the one OS per disk setup is ultimately cleaner.

          Been dual booting for >20 years now. It's nice that some games work on Linux pretty well these days, and of course I had fun messing with Wine manually to get some stuff to work decades ago. But it really doesn't bother me too much to reboot when switching between gaming and literally anything else.

          • keyringlight 2 hours ago
            The issue that has occurred a few times is that some windows updates will decide that they 'own' the disk it's installed on or knows better than whoever is running the system, and overwrite any other boot manager with window's own and you may need to break out a live boot to recover it. Using a single isolated disc at OS install time (if you can have multiple physical drives) and using a motherboard boot selection hotkey means that risk likely goes away.
            • pbhjpbhj 41 minutes ago
              I use BIOS boot selection to dual-boot. MS has broken it twice. I turned off SecureBoot now and just don't run games that require it.

              Apparently you can get a mobo with switchable BIOS config (or was it just a switchable SSD?) so the OS didn't even know that there's a second OS around. If there's no connection of the other OS then MS can't break it [as easily]!

              IMO it must be malicious, because otherwise it would be caught with remedial testing. I can't believe MS don't include dual boot setups in their testing.

            • vladvasiliu 1 hour ago
              Many newer computers now have a rudimentary bootloader integrated in the EFI. Some are actually quite nice, allowing you to browse partitions to choose which image to boot. HPs have this. You just hit a key during uefi “post” and voilà.

              The functionality is present on my new Lenovo laptop, various generations of HP elite/pro books/desks, old asus mobo and newer cheap gigabyte mobo, 7th gen intel nuc.

    • LetsGetTechnicl 9 minutes ago
      I dual boot Windows and Pop OS. I find the Windows 10 LTSC experience totally perfect, and it has a longer EOL.
    • connicpu 2 hours ago
      For me last year was the tipping point, with Windows 10 hitting EOL I refused to move to the buggy mess of 11. All the games I regularly play are now nearly flawless in proton and games that refuse to run on Linux just don't exist for me anymore. Admittedly I already didn't play the kinds of highly competitive online games that like to use KLAC, so might be a tougher sell if that's your jam. Most of my game time goes to FF14 and GW2.
    • tracker1 2 hours ago
      I tend to run pretty close to the edge on hardware (9950x, 9070xt, gen5 nvme)... I've had a few issues with that in Linux... that said, I've been using Linux as the main OS on my desktop for a while now, and when I upgraded about a year ago, I ditched the Windows drive entirely.

      I do have a Windows Server 2025 and Win11 VM running for a couple testing issues, but that's about it. That said, there seems to be a few integration issues on Wayland where the RDP client or the VM UI both will not intercept hotkeys like alt-tab, which makes it kind of painful to use the VM effectively.

      Even with the rough edges in Cosmic, I'll still take it over the jank they keep addding to Windows.

      • vidarh 2 hours ago
        Yeah, I mostly stopped checking hardware compatibility for Linux ~10 years ago. Every now and again there's an issue, but it's usually easy to work around, or I wait a little bit and it's resolved. When it got to the point that I felt I didn't need to check any more, it was a big deal.
        • tracker1 18 minutes ago
          I had an RX 5700XT at launch, that was about the most painful... but 6mo later it worked fine... But by then I did switch back to Windows because I couldn't deal with the day to day issues... A year later, I went back to Linux and haven't looked back though.
    • seabrookmx 1 hour ago
      I assume this isn't the case with every machine, but every hardware I've ever owned (including the Framework 13, which has pretty good Linux support) has had worse battery life under Linux (mainstream distros like Fedora and Ubuntu).

      To say nothing of the truly excellent battery life Macs these days get.

      That's the only reason to avoid Linux on a laptop these days, IMO.

      • HumblyTossed 33 minutes ago
        > That's the only reason to avoid Linux on a laptop these days, IMO.

        Pop_os! with the system76 power daemon makes a world of difference on my tiny AMD powered Lenovo ideapad.

      • wkrsz 1 hour ago
        David Heinemeier Hansson reports excellent battery life on 2026 Dell XPS 14 with Panther Lake https://world.hey.com/dhh/panther-lake-is-the-real-deal-4bd7...
        • seabrookmx 49 minutes ago
          I'm a little gun-shy of getting another Dell after two bad machines in a row (two separate models with swollen batteries < 3 years old), but I'll admit the 14 looks nice now that they've brought back the physical function keys!
    • MiddleEndian 2 hours ago
      Anecdotally, my (smart but doesn't really care much about computers) fiancee was able to get all dozen of her mods for The Sims working on Bazzite Linux without any help from me besides a chmod +x to one script.

      But we don't play any online multiplayer games, so YMMV on that one.

    • TheGRS 2 hours ago
      Its always been a momentum thing for me, grew up on Windows, esp in my LAN party days. The guys running linux couldn't play 90% of the games the rest of us were. When dev became more important to me I would typically reach for something else because the windows dev experience always kind of sucked IMO (unless you were a .NET person, which for the most part I was not).

      I have a spare laptop with Pop OS on it now and I'm really enjoying it. Kind of forget I'm on it sometimes. I'm considering putting it as my OS for my main powerful laptop that I play most of my games on.

    • bradley13 7 minutes ago
      If you avoid games that demand kernel-level access, gaming on Linux works just fine.

      Honestly, I don't trust game producers enough to grant then kernel access. Do you? Really?

    • baq 1 hour ago
      Linux is missing good vm defaults (dirty_bytes etc.) - out of the box settings on the distros I tried are abysmal; both windows and macos are much saner.

      Other than that, yeah, it's a royal pain in the ass. It's treating the user primarily as an upsell funnel.

    • pawelduda 2 hours ago
      I repeat this story every now and then but I "maintain" a 18 years old laptop with Ubuntu (mainly for Internet) for non-tech savvy user. I put it in quotes because I just run apt update every now and then - that's it. Just works. The only bottleneck is how resource-hungry browsers got over time but it remains usable. Ubuntu was installed sometime back in 2017 and there was no need for fresh reinstall since then.
      • SoftTalker 34 minutes ago
        That can't be literally true, no release of Ubuntu is still getting updates after 18 years. At some point you have to upgrade to the next release, and that's not quite as simple.
        • LetsGetTechnicl 10 minutes ago
          The laptop is 18 years old, Ubuntu was installed in 2017.
      • rbanffy 2 hours ago
        I did that for my mom. At some point she learned to click through the Ubuntu updater and she kept her machine updated by herself. I only kept tabs on her computer via the server monitoring tooling I had on my network.
        • Barbing 2 hours ago
          This sounds like the move, vs. having mum on Win+Chrome.

          If people had set their family members up with Firefox and Ublock Origin, then the Manifest v2 deprecation wouldn’t have resulted in seniors getting hit with certain scams. Specifically over the period between deprecation and the next visit from tech savvy family members.

          Unforgivable btw

          Edit - Linux bit’s important too b/c of MS nagscreens that could try to upsell

    • Aardwolf 2 hours ago
      I don't seem to have issues modding games like Skyrim, Fallout 4 or Factorio on Linux
      • wing-_-nuts 2 hours ago
        Do you use executable mods? Downgraders, engine fixes, etc? I'm also curious what mod manager you use, because getting MO2 to work under linux is a bit janky as well.
        • Aardwolf 37 minutes ago
          Probably not often I'd say, but at least there were some games I played with wine where some executables to apply mods also ran in wine and worked, I vaguely remember some fix to make something be able to use more than a few GB of ram to allow farther or better remdering, sometimes just a strange combination of things is needed to get something to work. But that's actually long ago, these days everything just works in Steam instead
        • joombaga 1 hour ago
          I use MO2 on Linux through Steam's Proton runtime, to play TTW (Fallout NV mod). Works fine. The TTW installer did require an older Proton version though.
      • dathinab 2 hours ago
        it's a question of tooling, modding kits

        most times it this tooling which causes issues not the mod itself

        For very popular games it's not rare if moddingkit/tooling producer (or contributes) made the tooling work on Linux, but it can be very hit or miss.

        but it increasingly more "just works", kinda, somewhat

        • delecti 1 hour ago
          Yeah. I recently tried to run an auxiliary program (Mass Effect save editor because the character creator sucks) on Linux which was only written for Windows. Getting it running in the same Proton "space" (bottle?) was not an enormous challenge, but it was very far from "just works".
    • IshKebab 57 minutes ago
      Install the IoT LTSC edition. No crapware at all. It's a really solid OS. Less painful than Linux overall.
    • iLoveOncall 2 hours ago
      I run Windows 11 as my main desktop (and use Mac at work and have a bunch of servers / NAS where I run debian), and W11 is not painful at all.

      I installed the Professional edition, disabled a few settings that I don't like the first time I installed it, and haven't had any issue or friction since then.

      Meanwhile I'm constantly frustrated at MacOS and obviously you can't do anything on Linux without running into some sort of trouble.

  • lemonish97 3 hours ago
    From the article: "Additionally, AI features in Notepad settings has been renamed to Advanced features and it allows users to toggle off AI capabilities within the app."

    I honestly don't mind this, as long as it's not being forced. And I believe this feature exists only within their npu PCs.

    • hootz 3 hours ago
      But it's just so unnecessary. Everyone has always expected Notepad to be a simple utility as it has always been, why does it need optional AI features? It just feels like bloat.
      • lynndotpy 2 hours ago
        When I stopped using Windows, it was because it required so much constant upkeep and maintenance to stay usable. You had to stay on top of the latest tool that disables tracking, things like Cortana you'd want to remove, the latest toggles you have to disable, what toggles revert themselves when you update. These all exist behind different shifting UI toggles which are not accessibly automatable. And all the while, you have to hope your registry edits don't force you to a lengthy reinstall where you have to redo all of these.

        I could be wrong, but as far as I know there's not one "Fix Windows 11" tool maintained to do all this for you.

        "You have to toggle AI features off in Notepad, and they changed the name to Advanced Features now," is just another heaving brick on the pile.

      • tracker1 2 hours ago
        I really think MS should have just resurrected the "Wordpad" app name for what the new "Nptepad" does. It would be far less annoying if they'd just done that.
        • trueno 5 minutes ago
          lol holy moly i totally forgot about how annoying it was when something opened in the bastard child that was wordpad.

          kinda crazy to me how terrible the entire windows experience is as a whole, i really think people have just lost sight of how computing should be.

          there's just too many cats outta the bag, they can back pedal all they want in blogs promising different, but we can already see here they're not willing to let go of the stuff they've woven into things that people hate.

          im gonna be blunt, windows kinda sux. this is already not a promising outlook for windows enjoyers. and it's only been what, like 2-3 weeks since they were putting out this nonsense

          > "You will see us be more intentional about how and where Copilot integrates across Windows, focusing on experiences that are genuinely useful and well‑crafted. As part of this, we are reducing unnecessary Copilot entry points, starting with apps like Snipping Tool, Photos, Widgets and Notepad."

          let me guess: copilot stuff remains on by default. lol, lmao even

      • philistine 1 hour ago
        I’d argue it is Microsoft’s own damn fault. They seem to have completely abandoned improving their system, in favour of dumping everything in their apps. Apple has introduced writing tools at the OS level, so you can use their LLM in TextEdit and no one complains.
        • pbhjpbhj 31 minutes ago
          With Apple, can you leave the LLM features turned off?
          • LetsGetTechnicl 7 minutes ago
            Yes you can keep Apple Intelligence turned off at the system level, which I do
      • raincole 57 minutes ago
        > Everyone has always expected Notepad to be a simple utility as it has always been

        Except the youngest of the demography who don't have this expectation, and live in AI hype era since they're kids.

      • Sharlin 3 hours ago
        Reminder that this is the company that decided to replace Paint with something called "Paint 3D", the laggiest and bloatiest "literally nobody wanted this" drawing app I've ever seen.
        • Rohansi 3 hours ago
          It was never replaced. Paint 3D was an entirely different app for 3D art only. It's also been gone for a few years now.
          • Sharlin 3 hours ago
            It was absolutely sold as a replacement. And it's gone now because literally nobody wanted it, used it, or understood why it existed. Sure, you could still find the old Paint in a disused lavatory behind a locked door with a sign "beware of the leopard". It wasn't even installed by default, unlike the 3D version, or do I recall incorrectly? Even MS isn't so stupid as to ship two separate accessories both called "Paint" in the same OS by default!
            • wlesieutre 2 hours ago
              And a weird obsession with making it impossible to customize the sidebar in Explorer, so there was a “3D Objects” folder stuck there permanently unless you’re the kind of user who doesn’t mind a trip to the registry editor.

              What percent of users ever found that useful? I think I’m being generous to guess one in ten thousand.

              Absolutely braindead management running Windows development.

              https://www.thewindowsclub.com/remove-3d-objects-folder-wino...

              • Barbing 1 hour ago
                > one in ten thousand.

                For their default file explorer experience, the prominent fourth option right in the sidebar. Oh my gosh, that is hilarious. Did someone think it made the computer look advanced (or did they want you to buy apps to uh make 3D stuff from them)?

              • Sharlin 2 hours ago
                Yeah, the "3D Objects" thing is just surreal. You can't make this stuff up.
                • robotnikman 1 hour ago
                  It was a relic from a time when it looked like 3D printing was going to be the next big thing.
                  • pbhjpbhj 28 minutes ago
                    Agreed, it looked like VR was going to be big, MS & Meta were pushing it hard.
        • hydrogen7800 3 hours ago
          Ugh, I can no longer press win key and type "p a i enter". I now have to find the old paint manually.
          • idle_processor 9 minutes ago
            Give FlowLauncher[0] or Windows Powertoys Run[1] a shot.

            There are some amazing tools like that (and Everything[2], which replaces Windows' inferior search) that really change how one interacts with Windows.

            There are other tricks like putting scripts or shortcuts or executables in a directory referenced by your PATH variable, which can make the Win+R trick better too.

            [0] https://www.flowlauncher.com/ [1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/powertoys/run [2] https://www.voidtools.com/

          • dataflow 1 hour ago
            Switch to Open-Shell's start menu and don't look back.
          • hilariously 2 hours ago
            win+r - mspaint - enter
            • hydrogen7800 2 hours ago
              Thanks! Also useful for an old win10 machine I have, and probably shouldn't be using anymore, that no longer responds to clicking the start menu button...
              • catlikesshrimp 1 hour ago
                Don't throw it away. Install windows 8, and the last offline version of office you can find. It makes for a great distraction free workstation and a monitor for your android (scrcpy).

                Or, you can install and reinstall linux distros and learn the ropes.

                You should be fine as long as you use a proper firewall device and access only manually withelisted websites, but it is always better to keep it offline. That said, it can become your next firewall device.

                • hydrogen7800 1 hour ago
                  I built it circa 2012 or 2013 and still have the physical win8 disc. I considered futzing with linux on it. The extent of my linux experience is via SSH to a raspberry pi kludging some docker containers for this and that. SSH/linux terminal feels like fumbling in a dark room flipping random switches until something works.

                  >scrcpy

                  I also have a pixel 5a whose screen doesn't work, but I think functions otherwise. Would this allow me to interface with it?

            • esafak 2 hours ago
              They don't even do substring search??
              • amlib 1 hour ago
                Back in the 90s doing substring match was probably deemed way too expensive and so just calling the executable name directly was as optimized as it got... and it's beautiful :)
              • xp84 2 hours ago
                Apparently there’s a proper app launcher in PowerToys.
        • whynotmaybe 3 hours ago
          Must be some Mandela effect but I'm sure that Paint.net was supposed to replace mspaint when it was started.
          • cwnyth 3 hours ago
            Paint.NET wasn't Microsoft's, but was an independent app: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paint.NET
          • Sharlin 3 hours ago
            It was supposed to be a third-party replacement, sure, but certainly not an official one. It started as a student project. It's just the prefix that tricks your brain to associate it with MS's own .NET branded applications.
            • saghm 3 hours ago
              To be fair, the .NET brand is already super convoluted (there's .NET framework, the .NET core, .NET runtime, the .NET desktop runtime, the .NET sdk, and I'm genuinely not even sure which if any of these might refer to the same thing), on top of it weirdly sounding like something internet related to a casual user.
              • Sharlin 2 hours ago
                Yes, "Copilot" is not the first brand that MS has tried to stick to everything while being just as confused about it as (inevitably) the consumers. Although somehow they did manage to keep .NET mostly aimed at developers - besides the actual frameworks there's Visual Studio .NET and other dev tools, but I'm actually a bit surprised that they never had "Office .NET" or "Outlook .NET" or even "Windows .NET Edition" or something like that. Maybe they still had some sane people in charge of marketing and brand management back then.
                • xp84 2 hours ago
                  They did brand the Microsoft accounts themselves, from “Passport” to “.NET Passport” for a while. That was before they were “Windows Live IDs.”
        • mlnj 3 hours ago
          I remember how Skype, an awesome piece of software transformed into Lync, which worked fairly well, slowly transformed into whatever MS wanted to call it year after year, slower and more buggy than the year before.
    • razster 1 hour ago
      Even with it off, you can still see that it uses a lot of resources for a basic Notepad. I've ditched Windows for work, second drive now has Windows for gaming and that is all. I can do all my work on Linux and that is fine by me.
    • saghm 3 hours ago
      If I'm understanding correctly, you have to go into "advanced" features to turn off AI? So someone who doesn't think they're an expert who needs advanced features might not ever go and look there? I'd argue that "advanced" features are something that a casual user would expect to be off by default and need to go out of their way to enable.
      • mcdeltat 3 hours ago
        "advanced" in 2026 is closer to "using the app how you want to as rather than the way that will generate the corporation maximum profits"
        • dataflow 1 hour ago
          This stretches back much farther than the 2020s unfortunately...
    • noir_lord 3 hours ago
      Be better if there was a global "Disable AI" option easily found in the settings that is a flag everywhere.

      Some of us (including very much me) simply do not want Copilot/AI anything and playing whackamole with settings is annoying but we'll do it anyway and it leaves a bad taste.

      Since it's the software equivalent of been in a filing cabinet in the basement behind a door that has a sign saying "Beware the Leopard".

      In reality it's a moot point, I disable AI features and Windows is a gloried steamos box for me at this point, I do my actual computing booted into Linux and have for decades.

    • Topfi 3 hours ago
      The "AI" additions to Notepad are not limited to systems with an NPU. Why would they be, it's powered by LLMs running on Azure [0].

      These sudden additions also correlated with the first CVE [1] in Notepad since its inception, so maybe their attention isn't where it should be.

      I for one very much mind this and many other inclusions including the metastatic takeover off Office. OneDrive also was forced upon and severely worsened functioning software, despite not being "AI", so there is precedent at least.

      [0] https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/enhance-your-wri...

      [1] https://infosecwriteups.com/the-dumb-editor-that-got-too-sma...

    • tosti 3 hours ago
      IMHO they're just hiding the wolf in sheep clothing. Can't complain about AI if it's not called AI. Modern problems require modern solutions, you get the idea. The snark in TFA about shareholders and stakeholders hits the nail on the head.
    • jgalt212 2 hours ago
      > I honestly don't mind this, as long as it's not being forced.

      This is indeed a step forward. With QuickBooks, there is currently no way to disable their extremely intrusive AI. I may just vibe-code a browser extension to block it. Fight fire with fire.

    • throwaway613746 2 hours ago
      [dead]
  • rdiddly 2 hours ago
    So they didn't remove it, they just renamed it? Reminds me of that time we fixed racism by renaming the master branch to main.
    • eps 1 hour ago
      Slavery. It was meant to fix slavery.

      Rasism was fixed by not using black- and whitelists on firewalls. Separate endeavour.

    • Glant 1 hour ago
      At least Comcast isn't the company with the worst customer support now, we can give that honor to Xfinity
    • claudiug 2 hours ago
      all the racism is gone now /s
      • rbanffy 2 hours ago
        The BDSM community felt attacked.
        • tanseydavid 1 hour ago
          If the pun was not intended, it should be.
    • Barbing 1 hour ago
      Maybe comparing <the sum total of annoyance from reading the old name> to <the current sum total of annoyance reading the current name>, it was a positive direction overall?
      • ecshafer 54 minutes ago
        I don’t believe that more than .0001% of people actually felt annoyance. Master branch was used referencing a master, as in the master copy of a record, not a slave master. No normal people were actually annoyed by that.
      • rurp 1 hour ago
        You need to add all of the real world breakage to scripts and tutorials on the right side of that ledger. Plus the negative effects of virtue signaling undermining efforts at substantive change.

        Also, are we supposed to ban the word master from all of it's dozens of normal English use-cases? I never got a clear answer on why git branch names were so much more harmful than someone mastering a skill or making a master record.

      • stronglikedan 1 hour ago
        nope. to this day, it's still fucks people up and causes mistakes. it was stupid then, and it's still just as stupid. virtue signalling is always fucking stupid, and sometimes, like in this case, is flat out egregious
        • smrtinsert 1 hour ago
          At some point virtue signaling is fixing symptoms of the problem. Always had a problem with master slave terminology happy to see it gone.
          • anonymars 48 minutes ago
            You'll be happy to know in the context of a "master branch" it never had any connotation to slavery, except in the minds of people who see everything as a question of race*

            Anyway I'm off to listen to the 50th anniversary Dark Side of the Moon remaster. Wait, is "dark" an okay word? I didn't get a master's degree in English

            * Parallel ATA on the other hand, yeah, yikes

      • lnenad 1 hour ago
        I mean, if you were to do that, I'd wager more people are annoyed with the change than were annoyed with the original name. So no, it was a negative direction overall.
  • mikaeluman 18 minutes ago
    I have been using Windows on my laptop and been annoyed by how performance have really degraded.

    RAM consumption on startup is 50% (of 16Gi).

    I asked claude to help me remove bloat and was horrified by all the different background services and "enhanced" and "advanced" features that are always ON.

    I don't think it's fair to say "no AI in any app", however. That should depend on the value delivered in the app.

    But I do wish there was some honest restraint on all these weird OS services that no one wants/uses.

  • andrewdubinsky 10 minutes ago
    Please let it be Cortana. Don't give up on her.
  • bachmeier 1 hour ago
    I honestly don't understand Microsoft's AI strategy. It seems to be built around automating the writing process. If you ask MS 365 Copilot (as opposed to the many other Copilots) what it can do, it's deeply disappointing:

    "Can you edit the Word document so the format is in line with these requirements?"

    "No, but I can help you draft an implementation consistent with the requirements."

    "Can you add this section to the 35 individual copies of this document in this OneDrive folder?"

    "No, but I can help you draft [something]."

    This is NOT the AI revolution anyone was waiting for.

    • mring33621 1 hour ago
      It looks like you're trying to write something! Click here to have me fuck it up for you!
  • ChrisArchitect 10 minutes ago
    Previously:

    Microsoft starts removing Copilot buttons from Windows 11 apps

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47722136

  • jasoneckert 1 hour ago
    I think we'll see this happen over time in all tools - individual AI brands replaced by generic AI icons.

    The real question is this: While the floppy disk became the standard "Save" icon, what will eventually become the standard "AI functionality" icon?

    • pawsocks 1 hour ago
      I'm guessing the 'sparkle' icon will stick around, for better or worse
    • micromacrofoot 1 hour ago
      I think it's even more than that, they'll be features without AI even being mentioned
  • cordwainersmith 1 hour ago
    So they're reshuffling the branding again. At this rate they'll rename it three more times before most people figure out what it does.
  • drooopy 1 hour ago
    They’re doomed to repeat the cycle of reinventing Clippy every few years and always failing at it.
  • ChrisArchitect 10 minutes ago
    who of you is using Notepad for anything?
  • lovegrenoble 1 hour ago
    Moved to MacOS, chao Copilot...
  • benterix 3 hours ago
    > At the start of the year, Microsoft generated a lot of goodwill among Windows 11 fans when it announced its big plan to fix the operating system in 2026.

    Interesting, I can't recall a single voice "Oh I'm so happy they changed their corporate strategy" but many of "I'll believe it when I see it".

    • shevy-java 3 hours ago
      Ah, you make a great point - I made almost the same comment a moment ago, because I remember that Microslop babbled about "we will listen to the community" some weeks ago. Guess it was indeed at the start of the year.

      So those who were skeptic were right - one can not trust Microslop. Its AI addiction is too strong already. It sold its soul to AI. There is no way back for Microslop anymore. All Win11 users will have to support AI. AI up all the things! \o/

  • _HMCB_ 3 hours ago
    Seems like what Apple does with Writing Assistant. At least in this case, it’s opt-in. You have to click. I don’t run Windows so I don’t know if this implementation is vastly superior or not.
    • Shank 1 hour ago
      If you turn off Apple Intelligence, it’s one switch and features like that are gone from every single location.
  • aizk 1 hour ago
    Microsoft is collapsing under the weight of their own bloat.
  • protoster 3 hours ago
    > At the start of the year, Microsoft generated a lot of goodwill among Windows 11 fans when it announced its big plan to fix the operating system in 2026

    The only thing generated was boatloads of incredulity and some laughs.

    • benterix 3 hours ago
      Yeah, I remember the same. Also, "Windows 11 fans" sounds like an oxymoron.
      • bilekas 3 hours ago
        Might be considered "Windows 11 Hostages" instead given they've dropped support for using anything else.
        • bluescrn 1 hour ago
          Wondering how long I can hold out on Win10...
      • tosti 3 hours ago
        It could relate to the amount of *pu and system fans needed to run so much bloatware :)
  • luxuryballs 2 hours ago
    I hope this is better than seeing that Copilot logo infecting every menu, I’ve had to use registry hacks to get rid of that thing.
  • tosti 3 hours ago
  • lovegrenoble 1 hour ago
    Microslop? No trust.
  • porridgeraisin 1 hour ago
    The copilot executable and the edge executable are actually the same! It looks at argv[0] to decide which to show you. You can move mscopilot.exe to msedge.exe, it still opens edge. And vice versa.
  • rbanffy 2 hours ago
    Microsoft Live Copilot anyone?
    • kjs3 2 hours ago
      Needs more 'Clippy'.
      • rbanffy 2 hours ago
        Live Clippy sounds very creepy.
        • catlikesshrimp 1 hour ago
          Live Clippy Copilot powered by AI. All turtles to the end...
  • scotty79 11 minutes ago
    If only there was a virtual machine I could run Windows in with full hardware passthrough, I think I wouldn't ever install Windows as main system anymore.
  • smrtinsert 1 hour ago
    Deep copilot integration feels so intrusive. It pops up with your recent files. What if they were my bank accounts or api keys? Whoever thought that would be a good use experience should be fired.
  • gverrilla 1 hour ago
    Sorry if your a windows user, but you have no escape, only Linux. Until you get the time and courage to do the move, you will continually be abused by microslop.
  • jmclnx 3 hours ago
    No surprise for large companies, one company even renamed itself but its approval ratings still stayed in the basement.

    A fortune 500 company I worked for renamed internal projects many times when the original failed. But they continued dumping money into those black holes. One dollar eating project was renamed 3 times and was on its way for a 4th rename when I left. That project was started between 2005 and 2010. I was not involved with it, but everyone knew it would fail.

    So M/S renaming copilot ? I expect a few more renames as time goes on :)

  • kotaKat 3 hours ago
    It's almost as if Microsoft really loves to assault and abuse its users and claim its for our own good.

    I'm tired of being a victim.

  • mring33621 1 hour ago
    Welcome to the new FartPilot!
  • NoSalt 1 hour ago
    LOL ... of course it is.
  • shevy-java 3 hours ago
    Didn't Microsoft say it will listen to the community, some weeks ago? And now it looks as if Microsoft did not tell the truth. To be fair: I think Microsoft actually has no alternative option. They sold out to AI and all Win11 users will have to support the hype train. I am so glad to have switched to Linux a long time ago.
    • whynotmaybe 3 hours ago
      Well, they heard that we don't like copilot in notepad so they removed "copilot" from notepad.

      And right after that they added a brand new feature called tolipoc that will revolutionize the way you analyze your logs or modify your 17 year old cmd file!

      Want to create a file with the current date and time? No need to google for it, tolipoc will do it for you!

      • a1o 2 hours ago
        Is the last sentence a reference to the .LOG classic notepad hack?
    • pndy 2 hours ago
      You prob recall this thing from 23 days ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47459296

      For me there's nothing MS could do at this point that would bring me back. And as I said in that thread, it's too late for them - people are moving elsewhere, maybe not in big numbers but exodus is in progress. MS harassed their users/clients too hard and for too long; now it's time to "enjoy" fruits of their deranged actions and decisions.

  • oskarw85 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • vee-kay 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • xacky 3 hours ago
    Copilot has been reduced to "Internet Explorer" status, where it is the "AI to download another AI".
  • prmoustache 1 hour ago
    That is a smart move from them. People have AI advertising fatigue but they sure like some of the features it allows. I don't know of anyone asking their 15y nephew to edit their ex or a photobomber out of a photo anymore, they just do themselves from their smartphone. They use automatic translation everywhere, they don't even look at links in web search but read the answer provided by an LLM, they sure fall into periodic meme/trends like converting photos to Studio Ghibli like drawing a year ago or whatever is trendy today, etc.