106 points
*

on linux? nah.

try using windows on a machine that old if you want to know the true meaning of slow. it will always be updating something meaningless like edge in the background on top of it.

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24 points

Me, who still daily drives an Intel Skylake laptop from 2015: 🤡

The boot time isn’t actually that bad, it’s like 6 seconds with Win10 and an SSD.

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11 points

Your Skylake laptop from 2015 boots faster than my Zen 4 desktop from 2022 (with a PCIe Gen 4 NVME SSD!)

This thing takes 25 seconds just to POST. The fucked up thing is that it used to be even worse, but has slowly been improving with BIOS updates. The good news is that once it’s up and running, this machine is ready to fuck. Programs open the second I click the icon and loading screens don’t exist in games anymore. But it’s still disappointing that AMD can’t figure out how to make their shit boot faster.

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11 points

It’s an issue with ddr5 memory checks. You can disable the checks but you might get instability.

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5 points
*

Edit I misread that, I thought you had a Zenbook not the AMD desktop lol 🙈

That’s actually insane because mine is also an Asus Zenbook. It’s the UX501 that I got at a liquidation sale, and I refuse to give this thing up because they really don’t make them like this anymore.

I’ll probably eventually move onto a Framework once this thing gives up the ghost, but I’m hoping for at least a few more years of use.

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6 points

skylake with an ssd is not that bad tbh

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1 point

Skylake + SSD here, fine for office usage even on Win10

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11 points
*

I love having it idle at 100% for 30 mins, fan at max, just to update some windows nonsense. Updating 500 packages on linux is done in 5 mins including the download. Like how do you even manage to make the update process THAT bad if not on purpose? I am baffled by that. It’s a thinkpad dual core i7 with an SSD. It only runs Debian now thankfully.

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3 points
*

right? i literally can’t fathom it and i’m not even counting all the crap 3rd parties insist in adding as always running system services for some damn reason. linux was a godsend to switch to.

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11 points

I still have my old laptop from college for whenever my PC is dead and I need a backup device. It’s from 2008 and still has an HDD. There’s Windows 7 installed and last time i booted it up the boot up time said 316 seconds. It’s ridiculous.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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2 points

My Commodore 64 boots up in like 4 seconds.

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5 points

Have they fixed that 100% disk usage bug in Windows yet? Seems to disproportionately affect laptops with magnetic disk’s and just chokes the whole system making it unusable

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7 points

Is that what the fuck I’ve been experiencing?

Jesus Christ this is it I’m finding a damn DVD and getting Linux.

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6 points

I’m throwing the damn SSD away and getting a new one to install Gentoo on

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3 points
*

not technically a bug, its updates and other stuff thats still notoriously heavy on windows. you can usually see what it is on the task manager.

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5 points
*

its not a bug, its a feature. its updates, telemetry and other stuff they want you to use like edge. you can see it for yourself on the task manager.

you can use some feature disabler apps to cut out a lot of this crap but theres only so much you can do on windows. updates are crazy heavy for what they are.

it is however a substantial improvement, they undo the mods on update and you will have to play little a cat and mouse game to keep it good.

windows can be improved but linux is the permanent solution for weaker hardware if you can use it.

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3 points

Yes but their RAM management (even though the desktop may use too much by default) seems way better.

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3 points

On windows? WHAT? You drunk? Linux has zram. This is where the discussion ends immediately.

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2 points

ZRAM is also not about RAM management. I am talking about the oomd

If on Windows a process is using extremely much resources, mostly you still can open a GUI task manager amd kill it. On KDE if this happens, I am lucky if I can exit to a TTY

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54 points

Have you tried swapping in a 21$ SSD?

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29 points

I’ve on more than one occasion saved an old laptop from being replaced simply by slapping a cheap SATA SSD into them. The owners are almost always convinced that they needed a new PC, when all they do with it is browse Facebook and watch TikTok all day.

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19 points

all they do with it is browse Facebook and watch TikTok all day.

World‘s most common PC use case

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4 points

Tiktok on PC is god awful, so I doubt it. Facebook and porn maybe?

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44 points

Kids these days will never know the frustration of booting a PC on an ancient HDD. I’d turn on my laptop, go do something else for 3 minutes, log in, go do something else for everything to wake up, then I can start using it.

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28 points

My MILs computer literally takes about 10-20 minutes to boot up. When I told her I’d help her upgrade it, she said she’s fine with it. She turns it on and then does a load of laundry while she waits. It’s painful.

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28 points

It’s a good motivator to do laundry I guess 👀.

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2 points

Swap the drive and do a fresh install. It will run like new.

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I still use HDD.

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6 points

Get a SSD. It will run so much faster and everything will be instant.

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I know, I used to use an SSD with a different laptop. But it doesn’t bother me enough, especially since I reboot it like once a month.

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2 points

But why??

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  1. I am a cheapskate

  2. I am too lazy to replace it (one of those modern hard to open laptops)

  3. I am too lazy to test and clone a 1TB (or more) drive

I actually used an SSD before with an old laptop, but that only required removing 2 screws. As for cleaning out dust, I don’t use it much anyway, mainly because I don’t want to deal with cracking this open.

I am just looking at getting some used ThinkPad.
But anyway, most stuff can be done on a smartphone. On the other hand, I already killed 1 motherboard likely due to overheating while re-encoding videos to AV1 in Termux. It was replaced under warranty both times though. The second time it was just some issue with communicating with cameras. Yeah, I am on this phone’s 3rd motherboard.

But anyway, it’s a laptop. I reboot it like once a month when updating, so it’s not a big deal.

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5 points

This was how my relatively modern laptop with an HDD ran when it had Windows 10 (which it came with). The main difference was that it was closer to 5-10 minutes.

I switched to Linux and the problem went away. Funny how that works.

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4 points

I’ve seen PCs that took something like 5 to 10 minutes to boot (xp era).

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2 points

When I was using a few years old (not even particularly old, I think it was maybe only like 3–4 years old at that point?) HDD running Windows it took like half an hour to start up lmfao. Now using that HDD as my home directory with an SSD as the root directory of an Artix Linux install and it’s silky smooth, including manipulating files in my home dir, so I think Windows might just be bad lol

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1 point

I’m using an old laptop as my Linux machine. I set up auto login and sway launch so that I can just power it on when I wake up so I can use it later

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1 point
*

I remember my parents saying „hey don’t use it yet it has to warm up” and it really had to otherwise all sorts of unexplainable things would start to happen. Cold start of pc in the morning was really important ritual that no cc cleaners could shorten.

Also viruses that would modify browser to something funny. A president of my country with a serious stare appeared at one point in my browser stating that this pc is seized by the government.

It scared the shit out of young me with all the pirate CDs I had from street vendors. I don’t think even my windows was legit but a pirated one installed by PC parts business as an extra

To be honest I hate modern web and only Lemmy is feeling cool somewhat again. Everything else about digital landscape has become lame af. Without the struggle things lose any meaning

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1 point

Considering my workstation tests all 128 GB RAM and 3 TB HDD storage during POST, I do know the feeling. But at least after POST all my devices, running Arch btw, start up in a few seconds including unlocking the disks from keyfile.

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38 points

Just turn it off right after it shuts down before the OS starts booting again. (Or just turn it off whenever, it’s not like there’s much chance of filesystem corruption these days. Although there is a chance of registry corruption if you’re using windows and it’s updating, which is honestly worse to fix)

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12 points

Modern Windows (and Linux) is very hard to kill. You can unplug it all day without issue. Registry corruption and similar issues have not been an issue in decades.

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5 points

I had to recover a W10 box from a family members work after windows had slowly given itself cancer of file corruption. I’ve dealt with this shit before and it’s not a big deal… usually…

This fucker took 3 days of babysitting to bring back to life. In-place upgrades, it required multiple (why, no fucking idea), dism, sfc just chipping away bit by bit. And no, this is a work machine, so wipe and start fresh was reserved for actual “cannot be saved” situations. It has a backup plan, and I am the unofficial/unpaid IT guy for that location, but I don’t have license keys or installers for the software used (inherited situation), and it would add lots of friction to get running again. Absolutely not jumping on that grenade unless I must, it’s untested if a restore causes license validation errors (time checks and other bullshit).

After that fiasco I applied a universal scheded task of dism followed by sfc, on a monthly basis, and every six months a few automated checks but also I pop my head in for a minute (remotely) just to validate that those automated tasks are running successfully.

It’s been about… 4 years now? And it’s been working as-expected. But windows obliterating itself with no user input isn’t what I’d call ‘a thing of the past’.

(also it wasn’t a hardware fault)

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3 points

I wouldn’t say decades.

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2 points

Last time I used windows 10 on one of my computers an update somehow got stuck so I just turned off the computer and I was never able to get windows to boot again because of how broken the registry was. This was probably around 2019

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1 point

A hard power off when the drives are mounted still isn’t a good idea. Just turn it off during post or when the grub menu is shown.

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27 points

My 10 year old laptop (which has been running Linux for 9.5 years now) has an SSD, so it’ll restart in a normal amount of time. Even old laptops no longer have HDDs only

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11 points

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linuxmemes

!linuxmemes@lemmy.world

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I use Arch btw


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