this post was submitted on 21 Mar 2026
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In a long post titled "Our commitment to Windows quality," published on Microsoft's website and sent via email to millions of members of the Windows Insider Program, Windows boss Pavan Davuluri laid out a laundry list of changes Microsoft plans to make in Windows 11, starting this month.

What's most remarkable about this post is what it doesn't contain. Here's how Davuluri kicked things off:

Every day, we hear from the community about how you experience Windows. And over the past several months, the team and I have spent a great deal of time analyzing your feedback. What came through was the voice of people who care deeply about Windows and want it to be better.

That paragraph belongs in the non-apology Hall of Fame, with a cross-reference to "Friday news dump" -- a classic PR technique that aims to minimize media coverage of the awkward news being released.

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[–] Lydon_Feen@lemmy.world 132 points 1 day ago (2 children)

The sweepingest of changes to Windows?

Moving to Linux.

I encourage everyone to take a major dump on Microslop and move to greener pastures

[–] Bullerfar@lemmy.world 16 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I did the jump 3 years ago, now Linux is the "normal" for me. Couldn't imagine having a Windows machine anymore. Not even a Mac.

[–] Lydon_Feen@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I am a more recent convert, having switched last year to Bazzite on my desktop and Linux Mint on my laptop. I also installed Mint on the desktop computer at work.

No dual-booting, all Linux all the way.

Screw Microsoft and the likes of Apple.

[–] Bullerfar@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ye, I remember the first 3-4 months where horrible. Started out with kubuntu, and everything felt wrong and broken.

But I can say this: The past 3 years has been amazing for linux. It really went crazy with the amount of things you can use now but not before. The past 2 years I havent had anything in my household other than linux. Even my mother and brother got onbpard, who isn't IT capeable at all! It's really a special time for linux and easy for folks to get on-board now.

[–] Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world 4 points 23 hours ago

My tech knowledge is not at all current, recently got sick of windows BS and installed linux mint on my laptop. The whole process was really easy, didn't have to use command prompt at all or understand any arcane technical terms. It was actually easier and more accessible than windows.

[–] Smoogs@lemmy.world 1 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

If I could have anything better than an iPad to sketch on that isnt windows or Mac, and was Linux based I would. So far all my other stuff is Linux aside from my phone. But soon. Soon I’ll have my fair phone … soon..

[–] Bullerfar@lemmy.world 1 points 21 hours ago (2 children)

Have you tried another good drawing tablet you could boot linux on? Now, I'm no artist, but I have heard good things about krita?

[–] Eldritch@piefed.world 3 points 20 hours ago

Krita is awesome. Tablet options not so much. Many Intel based tablets are rather heavy and clunky comparatively, or have poor digitization. Touch screens aren't the same as digitizer pen support. Some like the surface tablets are proprietary enough that you have to jump through many tech hoops just to set it up. And then there's the cost. You can do it but its expensive in money and time. It has to be something you want to do for yourself. Because it will not make monetary or otherwise.

Android tablets are again loaded down with tech hurdles. Can they be unlocked? How hard is it? And what special hardware might you need to do it? Then you have to consider how hard is it to flash a different operating system onto it. And finally, how much of the proprietary hardware is just not going to work, and is that a deal breaker.

There is a version of Krita for Android. But the few devices I have that can launch it. The UI is unusable. Everything else works. You just have to fight the UI hard.

I got an older ARM based chrome tab for about 40 dollars. Went through the hoops to put postmarket is on it. Only the camera doesn't work. But the 4GB of ram is the biggest bottleneck. CPU cores are fine. But just sitting idle at the desktop a little under 1/8 of the ram is already used up. Open Firefox or chrome and you are already swapping hard likely. Krita works well with the USF pen support. But the ram again is a heavy limit on document size. It's definitely not for most people.

I desperately would love a good affordable Linux tablet platform. KDE plasma's touch experience has been really good. Not perfect, but most of the hitches are edge enough cases in daily use. If someone would make a shell with just a full HD screen and pen support capable of using a compute module SOC. Raspberry pi or other compatible SOC. That would almost be ideal as long as they could meet a decent price point. Which is always the thing that tends to kill these concepts.

[–] Smoogs@lemmy.world 2 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago)

I have tried other tablets. The response is nothing like an iPad. Also I need to have at least one apple product just to use Apple TV (and validate anything Apple) which sucks hard.

[–] victorz@lemmy.world 46 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

It really is greener there. Been there for almost two decades, it's so nice. Been tweaking my setup ever since and it's still evolving all the time.

My last venture has been Niri + Noctalia shell. Works so great together.