• Synapse@lemmy.world
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    Got my parents a new computer for Christmas. I didn’t feel like acting as their 24/7 tech support so I let it with the Windows 11 that it came with. Yesterday they couldn’t get their webcam and microphone to work at all for our weekly family videocall. We ended up having the videocall on Signal. I believe they would face less troubles with Debian at this point.

  • HStone32@lemmy.world
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    Solution: install windows for them, but complain and evangelize at every opportunity. You’ll be so insufferable they’ll never ask you again.

  • PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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    i installed linux mint on my sisters household PC last week.

    my dad did his usual grumblings about “it should be windows” and i just said “i’ve been out of the windows ecosystem completely for the last 5 years and partially for another 3 years beyond that. i no longer provide support for windows, if you want them to have windows you need to support it”

    he went quiet after that.

    • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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      Honestly that sounds like a jerk move. Why would you force someone to use Linux? It isn’t your computer and if you are helping them you should do what they want. I wouldn’t be surprised if they bought a new machine and then ghosted you.

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          Maybe I’m just reading into it but I read it as they wiped the drive and installed Linux without asking for explicit permission.

          • schematic@lemm.ee
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            Well, based on the rest of their comment, they were “providing support”, so the implication is that the sister asked for help and received it.

            I would assume that they informed their sister as to what would be installed. I don’t think it’s fair to assume the worst without context.

      • PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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        It’s not hers. it’s one of my computers that i am deploying to her house for her and her family to use.

        It’s technichally for my neice but the rest of the family all also have access.

        no one in that household has expressed a specific preference of operating system. other than my brother in law texting me to tell me one of the old games he tried to install doesnt work (i did promptly offer to “make it work” but he declined).

        I have no problem with them installing windows on it if thats what they want. they wont be coming to me for technical support if they do though.

      • Hanrahan@slrpnk.net
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        Honestly that sounds like a jerk move.

        Quite the opposite,

        Why would you force someone to use Linux?

        In what world is that force ? He wasnt holding a gun to her head, the opposite, he’s freeing her from stupidity.

        Decent people help others, they don’t go along with their stupid ideas before at least trying to convince them its a stupid idea. An allegory perhaps, your friend comes over, they have a 1/2 dozen beers, they’re going to drive home… In your world it seems it’s force to ask them not to and to stay over.

        It isn’t your computer and if you are helping them you should do what they want

        Helping them is the phrase you seem to be confused about. It’s his sister, not his boss at the office.

        • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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          Some people actually want Windows. That’s not a “stupid idea” and it definitely shouldn’t be compared to drunk driving. I’ve lost people to drunk driving but last time I checked no one died or was fired because they use Windows. The evangelical rhetoric around Linux is harmful to Linux. Don’t go around promoting Linux like it is somehow going to be worlds ahead of Windows.

          If someone is looking for a Windows alternative it might be worth a mention. Don’t turn into some sort of Linux sales person. Linux can be good but it isn’t a Windows alternative. It requires some getting used to.

  • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    Meanwhile me with a CD book that has 17 bootable DVDs and CDs plus a separate DVD+RW for more random, less permanent crap and a portable USB DVD drive (the drive is sourced from e-waste and fails to write both DVD+/-RW and CD-RW at 4x, only 2.4x and 10x respectively work).

    I like spinny media.

    I mean, I also have a Ventoy disk, but I haven’t used it for a looooong time because it’s no fun, but discs are.
    I just need a bigger backpack. The WRT54GL is taking up quite some space too.

    Much cooler than ventoy, no?

    • thedoginthewok@lemmy.world
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      I used to have hundreds of movies, games and a couple linux distros on DVDs and CDs.

      I threw everything out years ago. It was cumbersome and it sucked. It was a waste of time.

      • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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        I bet you never heard its cool sound.

        brrrrRRRRR PS PS bRRR PS PS, PS PS, zzzzZZZZZMMMMMMMMM

        best thing ever

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      Not to mention iso booting from a disc…just works. Too many times I’ve tried booting various USB images only to have it fail for unknown reasons, the host machine has this weird quirk of not able to boot from a 3.0 port or…idk

      • Oh boy, you haven’t met some Dell Optiplexes.

        That shit, for whatever reason, can’t boot from internal DVD drive. I tried with 2 of them. Both had functional drives, I tried disabling secure boot, enabling legacy boot and some other settings which seemed related, but nothing worked. Then for shits and giggles I tried a USB DVD drive and that worked just fine.

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          Ya…some devices are seemingly straight hostile for doing this. Combined with Dells insistence on shipping PCs with a wonky “raid” mode for it’s single drive. Just mess. UEFI/secure boot etc…

    • boreengreen@lemm.ee
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      I have several dvd drives. Pretty sure none of them works. They have been sitting unused too long. At least one has a permanently deformed rubber band, that drives the spinny thing. They dry out with time and sitting still.

      I prefer solid state stuff.

  • the_q@lemm.ee
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    My 77 year old mother-in-law runs Pop cause of me and loves it.

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        Hey of it works for your pop and you keep stuff out of a landfill I say that’s a solid win.

    • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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      My parents love Bazzite.

      Is Pop as good and generally user friendly for those less familiar with Linux? Never heard of Pop before!

      • j5906@feddit.org
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        PopOS is great, the installation process is like 5minutes, with 4 minutes being the download and boot from USB. From there on you click “next” 5 times and are rebooting into a working system.

        To be absolutely honest, I had to do some googling and command line stuff to get my fingerprint reader in the laptop working but that was the only thing that needed any attention. But I never did a Windows install where I didnt have to configure at least 2-3 drivers, so I consider it a draw.

        From there one it is the typical stuff: You need one proprietary software? You have to figure it out for hours how to get it to work. You are fine with open source options? Go enjoy a blazing fast ad-free non intrusive non annoying OS. For me the trade of is worth it. Been using Linux since I was 14, if I could do it from my kids room with parents switching of WLAN after 22:00 you can do it too.

        • rice@lemmy.org
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          he hasn’t even heard of popos which is a good 50x more popular than bazzite. so obviously he’s here from a “gamers can use this distro” post/video and not familiar with much else

        • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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          My brother set it up for my parents even though they don’t game. I just think he installed it because it as intuitive as Windows for lay people.

          • chunkystyles@sopuli.xyz
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            Instead of Bazzite, Aurora or Bluefin great options. They’re from the same people, but more general purpose. I use Aurora dx (developer) and my non technical wife uses Aurora.

      • the_q@lemm.ee
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        Yeah it’s a very good overall distro. Things work well and it’s familiar enough to pick up and use.

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      Good for her

      Just make sure you respect the wishes of the people around you. It is not ok to force someone to use Linux because you think its a good idea. You don’t get to take advantage of people to push your own agenda. Windows is going to be ideal for most people simply because it is widely supported.

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        Most sane people wouldn’t bring their some brand car to another brand car mechanic and expect service though, unfortunately most people are not that sane when it comes to it.

        No linux? No free support from your frienfly neighborhood technician.

        Oh Windows? Yeah that’ll cost…

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          For me personally I’m not supporting anyone if I can avoid it especially users running Linux. I don’t want to have to manage a custom system when I could instead get them either a plain Windows install or better yet an IPad.

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        How is me “forcing” somehow worse than Microsoft actually forcing people to use their ad-pushing, data mining spyware of an operating system? My “agenda” is simplifying an elderly person’s computing experience, protecting her from phishing/scams and allowing her the freedom of not having to worry about one other thing.

        Weird take, bud.

  • yuriRO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Impressive, very nice. Let’s see Paul Allen’s 256GB Ventoy USB with 118 Linux distros and 36 ISO boot tools up his ass

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      As a fresh convert not having my .exes work would be sus. But with MS locking more and more stuff in their app store, we’re not too far from a full-on windows troll distro.

      • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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        It will obviously look different, but with binfmt, wine, and a sane initial setup, you could get a lot of .exe works from a click in the UI (or the CLI, after all, CLI apps exists on windows too).

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      Don’t actually do this as it is problematic. You should respect there wishes instead of trying to force Linux apron them. They don’t really need to know that Linux exists at all.

      The other issue is that you instantly become the sole source of tech support.

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          Yeah we are very different. I do IT for a living so I’m not exactly excited to do tech support outside of work.

          If it works for everyone i involved that’s great but the problem with Linux is that there are far fewer people who use it which means that suddenly I’m the central point of support. I want something totally hands off for me which means something friends and family know and can help with.

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            I’ve worked in IT my whole career and if someone wants me yo install Linux on their machine, or has questions about bash scripting, I’m dropping whatever I’m doing to help them.

            How else are my friends and family supposed to teach each other it nobody teaches them? Not everyone was as lucky as I was to be encouraged to pursue tech, that doesn’t mean they don’t deserve the same privacy and options that I benefit from.

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              I’m down helping once and I often will point people in the right direction

              The problem is that help isn’t needed once. It can turn into a full time job very quickly if you don’t draw the line.

          • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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            Since I’ve installed openSUSE Tumbleweed to everyone about 5 years ago I’ve actually done literally 0 tech support on that front so I’m superbly happy about that.

            With Windows (albeit 7) there was always shit going wrong (not to mention XP before that which I basically regularly reinstalled). With various distros (Ubuntu & Debian mostly, but others too) there were frequent fuckeries of various flavours when upgrading.

            • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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              I’m not totally against Linux. I just think that people here are so evangelical about Linux that they start installing it everywhere even when it isn’t a great fit. People don’t like change and installing Linux on there machine is a great way to piss people off.

              Honestly I think iPads are the best for those who want a simple experience. The alternative to that is Android tablets.

              • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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                People don’t say “install Windows”, they just want their PC to work. And if that PC isn’t for Adobe or kernel-level intrusive anti-cheat money-sucking games, there is no difference (except the spying).

                Also the amount of maintenance with Windows after each update isn’t small (software like Shut Up Windows helps with regedits tho).

                And most people don’t know what their OS even is.

                But no, I’m not giving an iPad to people that want Windows :P.

    • Xanza@lemm.ee
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      No. But the argument itself is so stupid to me.

      Ventoy has never been a secure tool. People are making the argument that it should be, which is just nutty.

      If you’re one of those people that grab random fuckin’ ISO’s from all over the internet to test em out, then no. You really shouldn’t use Ventoy. If you run official ISO from recognized sources, then realistically the risk is ever present, but minimal.

      Like getting in a wreck on the way to the store to pick up milk. It’s always a possibility, but not many people would stand around and make the argument that you should stay home forever because you might get into an accident, which is basically the argument against Ventoy. It’s “we’ll, it’s a crazy useful tool, but you shouldn’t use it because something might happen.”

      It’s just such a bad argument. Fact of the matter is, is that if there were a non-hacky as shit way to do what Ventoy does, it would be available right now. But it’s not… Because it’s really not.

      The only way to avoid the issues that Ventoy employs is to not use ISOs and use something like netboot.xyz, which presents its own set of issues. How do you know you’re not being MITM from the iPXE environment? Like, sure. You can technically verify it, but how do you know for sure on the fly?

      Like, if you sit down you can pick apart any software for being an insufferable gaping asshole of security vulnerabilities.

      • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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        The problem with Ventoy isn’t the ISOs.

        The problem is they use binary versions of core tools like cryptsetup in their source tree, vs compiling them at build time.

        This leaves the door open to supply-chain attacks. I.E. a PR with a bad cryptsetup binary, or an attack on crypt that makes its way downstream with no way to audit. This is how huge software distributions make their way to Wikipedia in a bad way: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/XZ_Utils_backdoor

        The solution is the build those binaries at build time, which a fork is working on.

        @Kongar@lemmy.dbzer0.com

          • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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            Yes, but…

            The build environment was not clean to start, which is why a contributor is working to correct that.

            You could also have the build scripts that run on GitHub pull the binary releases directly from their original release locations at build time, vs a file that an individual can modify in the source tree. This isn’t as good as building from source, but it’s better than nothing.

        • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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          Interesting! & longpanda*

          Explains y’all paranoid and keeps using those binaries? Says “sorry I do this free and that would take forever”?

          *

          To clarify, asking if there has ever been an official developer response/debate on this.

        • Xanza@lemm.ee
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          The advantage of Ventoy is its ability to work in any environment and handle 99% of ISOs. Compiling the binaries at build time requires a mature development environment to be able to build these utilities… Your exponentially increasing the size and complexity of the project to solve a relatively minor security issue.

          Ventoy is not the only way to create a bootable drive… If you don’t trust the blobs then don’t run the software.

          Forking ventoy to add the complexity of building these utilities is only going to be available for *nix base environments so Windows users are pretty much shit out of luck. Your exponentially increasing the size of the project, it’s complexity, and simultaneously significantly narrowing its usability…

          I said it before and I’ll say it again it’s such a bad fucking argument. It’s not mature software. It’s a literal confluence of hacks… And if you’re not comfortable with using it then don’t use it. It really is a huge security risk. But advocating that nobody use it is such stupid fucking thing.

          Advocate that people understand the risks of using it but to just run around and scream about how nobody should be using it for any reason whatsoever until the maintainer closes the security hole that makes it run is pretty stupid.

          • fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com
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            You:

            solve a relatively minor security issue.

            Wikipedia:

            In February 2024, a malicious backdoor was introduced to the Linux build of the xz utility within the liblzma library in versions 5.6.0 and 5.6.1 by an account using the name “Jia Tan”.[b][4] The backdoor gives an attacker who possesses a specific Ed448 private key remote code execution through OpenSSH on the affected Linux system. The issue has been given the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures number CVE-2024-3094 and has been assigned a CVSS score of 10.0, the highest possible score.[5]

            Binary supply-chain attacks are not “minor security issues”. There is a reason many companies will not allow admins to use Ventoy.

            I like Ventoy, it’s a fantastic project. I like that the author is transparent about where they won’t be spending their time. You can like a project, and recognize it’s flaws at the same time.

            A contributor building a PR to solve the build concerns is not a bad thing, it’s to be celebrated. Even a short-term solution of having the build script pull the binaries from a release and checksum them would alleviate a lot of that concern. And the Windows vs Nix item would be alleviated by the GitHub build ENV. Binary releases isn’t the problem, it’s binary in the source. This is about audits and traceability more than the build itself.

            Not having a security first posture on these kinds of attacks is how the xz event happened, and I would hate to see that happen to Ventoy. I look forward to contributors helping the author out.

            • Xanza@lemm.ee
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              Binary supply-chain attacks are not “minor security issues”.

              Yes they are. The binaries for Ventoy aren’t even updated from release to release. It’s not even evident how old they are. So crying about an attack that only matters if these binaries are bleeding edge is absolutely a minor issue. I don’t even understand how someone of sound mind and body could possibly believe otherwise.

              Not having a security first posture on these kinds of attacks is how the xz event happened

              No one is making the argument that security doesn’t matter. No one is pushing the idea that Ventoy is secure. I’m saying singularly and only that a supply chain attack is just about the dumbest goddamn angle possible to bitch about Ventoy because I could argue that Ventoy would be more vulnerable than it is now to a supply chain attack if the binary blobs are built and updated every time you build a bootable drive. It’s just a truly fucking insane argument that shows a lack of understanding of what a supply chain attack is. The built binaries may be vulnerable and it’s difficult to prove if they are or not, but if you update the binaries all the time they’re more (attack surface is larger) than if they’re only updated when absolutely necessary…

              It’s just plain a poor argument and I’m tired of every armchair expert pretending that its not. People in high security environments aren’t using Ventoy. It’s just such a ridiculous argument.

    • Kongar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I read what sounded like an intelligent follow-up on this subject. But I’m not smart enough to verify for myself, so I still refrain from using ventoy - even though I’d love to start using it again.

      It was basically “wacky code from all over the place, poor coding practices, can’t find anything bad, but methods used are sus af”

      Says one dude I read on the internet :/

      • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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        That’s it.

        Sounds like a Chinese geek tried to make something useful, did a lot of dirty hacks to get it going.

        And couldn’t properly explain because his social skills and English weren’t great.

        The blobs weren’t super suspicious, just some gpld tools, basically busybox kind of stuff.

        The real problem is what he made was so fucking insanely useful and needed by everyone that the standards for software skyrocketed.

        Like you make a cure for cancer and everyone starts screaming at you because one of the side effects is temporary impotence.

    • tischbier@feddit.org
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      Just have 500 thinkpads and you can avoid security issues all together! A thinkpad for every distro EZEZ