- cross-posted to:
- lemmyshitpost@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- lemmyshitpost@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/35876309
A month remains.
So to uninstall Windows first you have to get through Door?
I mean, you have to reboot it at some point; even if, say, you can’t plug in a USB so you boot over network.
Barefoot, shirtless, through broken glass. Linux is one helluva drug.
It doesn’t look like glass to me
“Don’t resist! It’s for your own damn good!”
“OH GOD, WHO EVEN ARE YOU?!”
xxce2aab@feddit.dk “Don’t worry about that. Do you like things that wobble?”
Great, I have something in my pocket for you then
whimsy@lemmy.zip It’s just a pocket full of jelly. “Is this something that you would like?”
Only if they don’t fall down.
“As it so happens, I do. Have you heard about our Lord and Savior Gömböc?”
Lol I remember that being the main feature that got me into Ubuntu
Honestly some people I know I just want to break in to restart their PC that’s been running constantly for half a fucking year racking up chrome tabs, and yet they still bitch about it being slow…
It does sort of suggest that from a UI standpoint, a chunk of users doesn’t really deal well with the traditional paradigm of “opening a document in an application consumes resources, and part of the job of the user is to manage those resources”. Like, maybe Chrome should just do the equivalent of, at least by default, converting a tab that hasn’t been viewed for some time into something akin to a bookmark, just reload it when it’s viewed. Or at least push the data into on-disk storage.
I don’t use Chrome, but Firefox does something vaguely-analogous to that for session storage — like, if Firefox dies unexpectedly, restored tabs won’t reload content until actually viewed, to avoid the thundering herd problem.
I remember when I first encountered mobile OSes auto-killing programs and stuff to try to manage memory for users. I thought that it was pretty insane. But…clearly some users have trouble with it, and maybe it’s a reasonable UI change for them. I know people who had difficulty, on various desktop OSes, understanding the significance of starting a program and the idea that a running program would consume memory and perhaps CPU time.
It’s definitely more a habit of people who’ve used a smartphone more than traditional PCs.
I’m older GenZ and my friend group is split pretty evenly between those of us who had laptops/desktops growing up and those who only semi-recently (like last 5 to 8 years) got their first actual PC for gaming.
And you’re right Firefox does handle memory usage better in general, which is why some of my more “hardcore tab-hoarder” friends use it. But Chromium, not so much Google Chrome but mainly OperaGX/Brave seem to be the choice of my generation…
Enable chaotic good mode and be the change.