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Cake day: March 25th, 2025

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  • Sorry to say, but both Zen and Floorp were obvious honeypots from the beginning.

    Unsolicited advice, but don’t adopt the latest browser/search engine/OS that promise privacy and/or security, and you’ll avoid a lot of disappointment. Most fall apart at the seams within a year or less.

    If the one browser/SE/OS you currently use works, stick with it until more research on the newer stuff comes out. Then you can reassess.





  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    That’s what this conversation is about. Normally I’d chastise people for not reading through to the body of the linked article, but this time it’s right in the headline. You literally could not have reached this post without reading it at least once.

    It’s called having a conversation and typically in those people move past the starting point on to other related topics. There’s no need to read malice into it.

    You’re welcome to not answer further, too.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    Well, yeah. What kind of security do you think normies are running? They won’t even get hijacked by an unpatched Windows 10 exploit, they’ll just try to download The Last of Us by opening “WatchOnlineMoviesFree.exe” when a pop up tells them to.

    Well exactly, although let’s be honest: “normies” will downgrade upgrade to windows 11 because they always want the latest greatest thing.

    Business operations will go with whatever is cheapest to maintain, which is the entire point of LTSC and the article in the link.

    This might be true wherever you’re from (I’m assuming US?) but it’s in no way reality where I live. Here you must use a secure OS for businesses, you can’t just use whatever.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    I suppose. We would have to know if it’s worth their while to work on security flaws (which I imagine they will put zero effort into and pretty much just answer to bounty hunter reports) for $30 a year.

    But because I know Microsoft and am used to their shenanigans, I wouldn’t hold my breath on that lasting for too long.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    I personally use Fedora (starting yesterday actually), but Mint is definitely a serviceable distro that works for a wide variety of people.

    I simply don’t like how it stays so behind on updates (I see that as a big security and privacy risk), but if you don’t need windows-only proprietary software, or all you do is browse the web, then Linux Mint is a familiar and usable enough distro.

    If you’re going to criticize Mint for being behind in packages, then you also need to criticize Debian, because that’s where the philosophy comes from.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    Wow! Thank you for going through the effort of figuring out whether there was a solution for me. I really appreciate it!

    You’re most welcome!

    Which a shame because I do want Linux to be more widely used than it is currently, and I think small annoyances like this are part of what is holding it back.

    And yes, I completely 100% agree. Hopefully there will soon be a fix for this, because like you said, it really sounds like something that should be able to be fixed relatively easily, lol.

    Anyways, best of luck to you in the future!


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    Hey, so I just tested this and you’re right, it doesn’t work as you described.

    I suppose I unconsciously found workarounds and just ran with it.

    For the examples you mentioned:

    I’m is achieved by typing ’ and then space.

    ç you can get with AltGr+<

    The other two, I have no idea what they are, but I trust your judgment.

    I also went around some forums and yeah it appears other people report it doesn’t work as it should. A bummer.

    Maybe there already are some custom keyboard layouts out there you can download?

    To get




  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    Sounds lovely, thank you for that feedback. I’m very excited to try. I’m gonna try to install Aurora OS (immutable) and boot from a pendrive on my wife’s Mac (it has an Intel processor still, so it should be fine). If everything works well, I’m sure shell be very happy.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    I predict the big replacement for supported Windows 10 will be unsupported Windows 10. I expect that’s a pretty safe bet

    Famous last words before getting a keylogger that leads to all your bank accounts being drained due to lack of security patches.

    Also, this is pretty much not possible (if not illegal) for business operations since those generally require having a secure OS to work on.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 days ago

    That problem was present in both distros, and I even went so far as to unsuccessfully edit system files to get the desired behaviour.

    What desired behaviour are you talking about exactly?

    Because I have used those exact two distros, also with deadkeys since I type in Portuguese and Spanish alongside English, and deadkeys works just fine for me.


  • Mike@lemm.eetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    • To use Windows only and legacy software.

    This is a fair point. If you’re a creator and need adobe software then Linux is pretty much a no go. However, a lot of windows software have Linux equivalents (and those

    • Some laptops don’t support Linux due to missing drivers. are generally free as well), so its a matter of doing research.

    If you pick the right distribution it may include all the drivers you need. So far I tested 5 distributions and they all worked straight out of the box. I’ll test Linux on a Mac this afternoon and see how it goes, but I’m optimistic it will just work also.

    Some very old people hate change and would want to use windows 10 till the end of times, matter of fact I had seen a full office with about 5 desktops that is still running windows xp. (Spoiler alert:they got a ransomware 2 years ago.)

    Fine. These people who refuse to adapt to the world can just keep using windows. No skin off my nose either way.

    finally, Windows is idiot proof, meaning that it’s kind of hard to ruin desktop windows during the normal operations. In comparison, a bad Linux update could fuck your boot loader beyond repair (it happened to me twice in fact, once on openSUSE tumbleweed and the other on Clear Linux).

    Now this “idiot proof” take is really funny. You see, I’ve been using Mint for about a month now, never having to log into Windows. Yesterday I needed to log into windows and was immediately met with an update (against my consent), followed by a blue screen of death and when I restarted my laptop my profile couldn’t be acceded and I was instead logged into a safe Environment.

    I ended up having to troubleshoot using the Registry to get my account back. If this is idiot proof I have no idea what you consider a system that just works (which is what Linux does in my experience). You’d feel like Heaven is on Earth. On another note, WiFi never autoconnected on login in on windows in my laptop, but it does on Linux.

    As for the issues you had, I understand. Rolling releases aren’t for everyone and if you’re not particularly into tinkering or just use your laptop to browse the web, an immutable distro is pretty much unbreakable.

    Otherwise, Linux Mint is very conservative so it won’t break with updates (and in the rare instance that does, you can just use Timeshift to rollback the updates anyway).