• Confused_Emus@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    Are people just going to keep reposting this misleading shit headline of a post until no one reads the article and just goes along with it?

    Are the people constantly reposting this even reading the article and realizing how illiterate they look?

  • Shardikprime@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    It should be noted that you can still use Notepad without a Microsoft account

    Despite the ability to still use the software without an account

    Are we not doing context anymore?

    What is this? Just outrage for the sake of outrage?

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      Exactly. The issue is that it’s a freemium model, where they advertise a product with additional features in Notepad. But Notepad itself is still free.

      That’s still bad, but so is the title.

    • Nosavingthrow@lemmy.world
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      Don’t take this the wrong way, but it’s hard for me to contain my incredulity: have you been asleep for the last decade? Has a very obvious pattern of enshitification not been constantly proven as a rule on the tech sector? And an article is… outrage?

  • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    This is misinformation. They added the login requirement for their Generative AI and the actual notepad doesn’t require a login. But I guess we’re ragebaiting today.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          2 days ago

          Can’t wait to see in 5 years while all of the LLM nonsense quietly gets shuffled further and further to the back until it’s gone like Cortana or Paint3D

          Meanwhile has anyone noticed Microsoft has unhidden some genuinely useful older menus like Control Panel? Earlier in the windows 10 lifespan you couldn’t search for control panel and had to instead use constantly changing shortcuts and tooltips to gain access to it, but now you can just search for Control Panel and pull it right up. I’m not thrilled that I have to dig for the network adapter properties still but I’ll take the improvements I get

          • the_crotch@sh.itjust.works
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            2 days ago

            I hate the information superhighway the world wide web the blogosphere social media web2.0 mobile the cloud IOT blockchain ar/vr generative AI

      • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Yeah. This is why I’ve disabled copilot and Gemini on my devices altogether. It’s not worth it to have this nonsense filling up everything you use or rely on on a daily basis.

        • dubyakay@lemmy.ca
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          3 days ago

          I love Kate, but I’ve only been using it since last August. Been using npp for a decade before that, even as my IDE, and I felt like it was stronger than Kate.

          Kate has a lot of features that are not well documented or that you have to tape together to make something functional, while npp just works out of the box or with one of its many addons. Additionally the Kate documentation website is atrocious, lacking even basic search functionality. I had to join their IRC channel to get help figuring out something (path to some obscure config file that the latest version actually reads from), and while they were most helpful, I really shouldn’t have had to go through all that trouble.

          Maybe my approach to trying to solve a problem was wrong, coming from Windows + npp.

          • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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            3 days ago

            Maybe I’ll give npp a test again. But I’ve been using kate because I’ve been using it on my linux system and found out I can install it at work on windows as well

    • Gestrid@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      I turned off that AI stuff as soon as I saw it. Click the gear icon in Notepad in the upper right to open settings and turn it off.

      • atrielienz@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Oh, one of the first things I did was group policy edit anything to do with tracking, ads, or AI.

      • benjaminb@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 days ago

        Yeah. Like, I get AI can be useful, but it’s fucking everywhere! Even a god damn fridge got AI! And I hate it to be so forced on me, like, I just wanna write text or code without Copilot annoying me all of the time.

    • LittleRatInALittleHat@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Is the Genevieve AI enabled by default?

      After opening the notepad app does it ask you for that login?

      Is your access to notepad restricted by the login?

  • benjaminb@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 days ago

    After taking a look at the pictures of the article, I noticed “requires AI credits”. Credits?! What is this now? Some shitty mobile game? Really, Microsoft isn’t ashamed of anything anymore…

    I mean, I don’t know about Microsoft and windows, so maybe this is different, but the name sounds crazy!

    • ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Likely you’ll have to pay for some AI service, because the executives’ children cried after watching an old sci-fi, that “we can’t have intelligent conversations with out computers in 2016 in the real world, while in 2015 in the movie adaptation of Don’t Build The Torment Nexus, there was Torment Nexus the intelligent and smart computer”.

  • Shady_Shiroe@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    My understanding of the different operating systems

    MacOS: One time hardware payment for their service (plus for every other device)

    Linux: Free as in price free and freedom

    Windows: 30+ subscriptions to edit 1 file, then cooldown till next day or upgrade subscriptions to enterpise version for a kidney/per user/per month.

    Title

    ChomeOS: Communism for the children, supported by the Education System

    • zqps@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      Apple heavily pushes their users towards iCloud subscriptions. More so on iOS than macOS but still.

      • RightEdofer@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Easy to avoid on Macs. Harder on phones for non-technical types. The bigger issue with Apple is I think getting data out of iCloud should you want to do something else. Their proprietary formats and databases (especially for photos) is kind of a nightmare.

    • horse@feddit.org
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      3 days ago

      imo macOS is better value than Windows. A Windows PC of similar quality to what Apple offers (built quality and specs) is not that much cheaper and with a Mac you get a ton of actually usable software included.

      Obviously FOSS still wins offering a ton of good software for free, lots of choice and the option to choose from hardware at any price point. But Windows is just bad unless you’re an enterprise user or gamer (and the latter is changing fast in Linux favour).

      • Mistic@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Have you ever built PCs? Macs are significantly more expensive for the same spec

        The rest I agree with, it doesn’t help that Windows has been steadily going downhill with each new version…

        • horse@feddit.org
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          I guess for desktops you have a point, especially if you build it yourself. I was thinking of laptops mostly and also considering the build quality and things like the keyboard/trackpad, screen and speaker quality. If you want something comparable running Windows the price difference isn’t going to be massive.

          • dustyData@lemmy.world
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            You can buy a top CPU laptop then upgrade or even pay to upgrade with high quality ram and storage modules and you would still be paying less than an equivalent Mac. Which you can’t upgrade of course, because the only option is buying as is out of the gate. No matter what Apple says, 32 GB of ram simply doesn’t cost $300, their pricing is meant to fleece customers.

            • Eyron@lemmy.world
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              Is there a particular model you’re thinking of? Not just the line. I usually find that Windows laptops don’t have enough cooling or make other sacrifices. If you want good cooling, good power (CPU and GPU), good screen, good keyboard, good battery, good WiFi, etc., the options get limited quickly.

              Even the RAM cost misses some of the picture. Apple Silicon’s RAM is available to the GPU and can run local LLMs and other machine learning models. Pre-AI-hype Macs from 2021 (maybe 2020) already had this hardware. Compare that to PC laptops from the same era. Even in this era, try getting Apple’s 200-400GB/s RAM performance on a PC laptop.

              PC desktop hardware is the most flexible option for any budget and is cost-effective for most budgets. For laptops, Apple dominates their price points, even pre-Apple-silicon.

              The OS becomes the final nail in the coffin. Linux is great, but a lot of software still only supports Windows and Apple; Linux support for the latest/current hardware can be a hit or miss (My three-year-old, 12th-gen Thinkpad just started running well). If the choice is between Mac OS or Windows 11, is there much of a choice? Does that change if a company wants to buy, manage, and support it? Which model should we be looking at? It’s about time to replace my Thinkpad.

              • dustyData@lemmy.world
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                Running LLMs is not a feature that 99% of users need or want. Look at all the AI laptops flopping in sales. People don’t care about RAM soldered to the motherboard to squeeze a milisencond on a feature they don’t use. It’s a money grubbing strategy, plain and simple.

                • Eyron@lemmy.world
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                  Did you purposely miss the first and last questions: Which laptop is the good value?

                  I never said people need to run LLMs. I said Apple dominates high-end laptops and wanted a good high-end to compare to the high-end Macbooks.

                  Instead of just complaining about Apple, can do what I asked? Best cheaper laptop alternative that checks the non-LLM boxes I mentioned:

                  If you want good cooling, good power (CPU and GPU), good screen, good keyboard, good battery, good WiFi, etc., the options get limited quickly.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          I think macs are more comparable when you compare OEM PC to OEM PC. I’ve specced out a few optiplexes for clients and all have been over a grand each. I wouldnt spend that much on my own computer but I know how to pick a good used computer or build my own if I so desire. The clients just want a computer they can forget about for a decade and yell at Dell when it breaks so Optiplex it is.

          How much does a Mac Mini cost? $800 for a variant with 512GB of storage. Literally cheaper than a similar Dell Opitplex

        • RightEdofer@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          Not really if you actually try to match the screen too. Good colour accuracy is expensive. It’s the best part of their products. If someone doesn’t need that then yeah, definitely better options.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        A Windows PC of similar quality to what Apple offers (built quality and specs) is not that much cheaper

        I don’t think that’s true, at least if we’re talking about hardware. The only thing that I think really makes this argument is the screen, because you need to go really high end to get the same quality screen (if it exists).

        If we mostly stick to CPU, RAM, storage, etc, then you can get a really competitive PC for about half the cost. I bought a decent ThinkPad new about 7 years ago for $500 (E series), which was pretty competitive w/ the Macbook Pro in terms of specs, and I still use it to this day. I didn’t go top-of-the-line, so the CPU was a little worse and it had integrated graphics, but I could absolutely find a similar build to the MBP for $1k or so, probably less. The MacBook Air and Mac Mini, however, is a lot harder to find a competitor for and I think their value is quite strong with that form factor.

        If we include software, then yeah, macOS offers a ton of value, since you get a decent office suite and a bunch of other utilities included with it, whereas w/ Windows, you just get trial versions of subscription software. So valuing the included SW in macOS vs Windows really depends on the individual.

        Windows is just bad

        Agreed. I only buy “Windows” laptops to install Linux on, and on my last laptop, I got a $40 discount because I told the sales rep I wasn’t interested in Windows and they gave that to me.

        That said, the value that Windows provides that other OSes don’t is compatibility. macOS can’t play Windows games, and Linux can’t play some games that work on Windows. If you need that compatibility, the value assessment is a lot different than if you could switch platforms without giving anything up.

        • horse@feddit.org
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          Yeah, but if you look at the whole picture and not just specs, the hardware isn’t priced that badly. Like you said, a similar screen would only be found on high end devices and I would argue you can’t even get a trackpad that is as good as the one on a MacBook from any other manufacturer. You also get a pretty decent webcam and speakers and the aluminium chassis is exceptionally good too. If you don’t care about those things then I understand looking mainly at specs, but if you do these things add up to a really good user experience.

          Don’t get me wrong though. I don’t want to shill for Apple here. There are some things that are just obscenely expensive. The cost of RAM and storage upgrades is an insult. Or the Mac Pro wheels or basically anything “small” (adapters, the Apple cloth etc.).

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            Sure, if you’re looking for exactly what Apple offers, then they offer a decent value. But if you want any changes, you’re SOL.

            I personally don’t care about half the things they ship standard (screen, camera, chassis, trackpad), I really care about things they charge extra for (RAM, storage), and I like some things offered by other manufacturers (TrackPoint + mouse buttons from Thinkpad, repairability, keyboard feel, etc). I also don’t really like macOS, even after using it for years at work.

            For me, they offer poor value. For someone else, they offer good value. It all comes down to what you value.

    • Lifter@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 days ago

      CheomeOS: Let Google silently start tracking your kids until they are old enough to sell all of that accumulated data.

    • shortrounddev@lemmy.world
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      MacOS

      And you get the privilege of making that one-time $2000 purchase every 2-3 years when Apple eventually nerfs their hardware with bad firmware updates

      • RightEdofer@lemmy.ca
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        Examples? Not at all my experience. I love my Linux boxes but every MacBook I’ve owned has lasted 10 years and generally is quick until near the end of that period. My iPhones have also all lasted longer than my Android phones with considerably more updates and security patches (supposedly this will be more on par now if Google doesn’t cancel yet another program).

  • yggdar@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    The title is quite sensational compared to the content. They only added an AI Rewrite feature for notepad that requires a Microsoft 365 subscription. Considering the cost of AI, and the fact that it will very probably run in the cloud, it is very reasonable that it isn’t free. Everything else about notepad remains free / included with the price you paid for the OS.

    • Noedel@lemmy.world
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      I agree, but the idea of adding AI to notepad is quite insane in its own right

        • DemonVisual@lemm.ee
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          3 days ago

          That’s actually very nice, one of the few Microsoft programs that I genuinely miss - layers are a quality of life feature that is actually really nice to have 👍

      • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        I think the idea is that you can use it for reformatting small sets of data I guess.

        “make all the dates in this CSV iso-8601”

          • lambalicious@lemmy.sdf.org
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            3 days ago

            Heck, it probably can be done with a regex. (Yeah, I know)

            There’s no need to kill three forests just to do the exact same work you could have done by opening your dataset in Excel.

          • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 days ago

            You’re right of course.

            Like the other commenter said for this specific problem you’d use a spreadsheet.

            It’s just an example though and there are others, like maybe removing url encoding from a string or something.

            Again this can be done in some other tool without much fuss, but the versatility offered by notepad will be useful for a lot of people.

        • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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          2 days ago

          “make all the dates in this CSV iso-8601”

          This is a use of AI/LLM processing that I could agree with, if it could be trusted. Since it cannot, better to open in vim and regex replace, or process with Python.

          That said, I’d rather store as epoch and display as ISO-8601 as the arithmetic is much less prone to error in epoch than any other format.

          • null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 days ago

            Yeah look I’m not an AI advocate at all. If I were confronted with this my first instinct would be to manipulate it in a spreadsheet because they can juggle data types like this pretty effortlessly.

            The CSV / dates thing was just an example, but I still think it’s a good one. My assistant at work would 100% use notepad like this rather than using a spreadsheet.

            It’s also worth pointing out that notepad + LLM would be a lot more flexible than a spreadsheet. Just paste whatever there and explain what you want in plain english. You don’t need to parse your request into regex or spreadsheet formulas. For you and I, we might have spent years interacting with regex and other things such that it’s a pleasant challenge when it arises. For 20 year old me it would have been a tedious impediment to whatever I was trying to achieve.

            • nickwitha_k (he/him)@lemmy.sdf.org
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              2 days ago

              Yeah. That makes a lot of sense. The general inaccuracy/untrustworthiness of LLMs makes me very uncomfortable in their use for data processing and transformations. I’d rather take a while to get it right than to potentially hand off a CSV with glaring problems due to use of an LLM.

      • mr_jaaay@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        Why? I mean, one of the main features of generative AI systems is to generate text (the quality of which I won’t get into), why not add this to something like Notepad. I agree that Notepad should be thought of as a lightweight, well, notepad, but still might be useful as a quicker alternative to Word.

        The fact that Microsoft is trying to shove Copilot down our throats at every possible step is idiotic, I agree, but having an AI as part of a notes app doesn’t seem too weird.

    • Halliphax@lemmy.world
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      They give Copilot out for free so it’s weird that they’re charging for the Notepad AI feature.

      Hell, just copy and paste the content into Copilot and ask it to rewrite it, I bet it’ll just be doing the same thing but for free.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      Exactly. Instead of doubling down on trying to extract profit from everything, they should go back to their old motto of “it’s the operating system, stupid” or “developers developers developers…”

      Microsoft should be trying to make their OS more attractive by providing more value, and then pushing for developers to release through their Microsoft Store so they get some profit after sale. Basically the iPhone strategy of making a solid base product, and charging for every additional app that gets installed.

      But no, they’re making the default experience suck more, which makes alternatives a lot more attractive. That’s… not how you maintain market share.

  • Druid@lemmy.zip
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    3 days ago

    Finally, I can proudly proclaim that I’m no longer bound Microsoft’s bullshit. Been a rocky start, but I’ve been happily using Kubuntu on my Surface for a while now, and it’s going awesome

      • Druid@lemmy.zip
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        It’s a Surface Go 2, 8GB RAM, I think - maybe 4 - and a couple years old now. Haven’t tried, actually, since I rarely if ever need the cameras. However, I read that getting the cameras to work is a bit of a hassle. Not impossible but annoying

    • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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      I have a lenovo yoga 14s which is similarly transformable. Are there good resources out there for installing linux on these kinds of laptop, or are they mostly focused on surface laptops?

      Honestly Windows on it is just a nightmare and I’d love to ditch it.

        • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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          Thanks! Looks like on the talk page there’s doubt about whether it even has a touchscreen, which is a little discouraging. I guess I can just try, but It’s good to know a resource like this exists.

  • Geodad@lemm.ee
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    3 days ago

    If you must use windows, Notepad++ is the way to go.

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          3 days ago

          vscodium fixes the privacy anyway. It’s always open so startup times are no issue for me.

          I still prefer to keep a stripped down, basic text editor though. Ah well, I’m not on windows so no big deal.

          • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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            vscodium fixes the privacy anyway

            At the cost of some features not working (e.g. Pylance, which is the default Python extension, as well as others by MS).

            • 4grams@awful.systems
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              3 days ago

              For plain text, either nano on CLI or whatever built in basic text editor comes with LMDE.

              Windows I used notepad, from now on I’ll add ++ :)

      • zer0@lemmy.ml
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        Those are 2 different use case pieces of software . NP++ is an editor while vscode is an IDE

      • ExFed@lemm.ee
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        Clearly this is a controversial statement. I’m team “use what’s available and preference tools that get the job done quickly.”

        I work in several different languages. VSCode has TreeSitter and a bevy of slick plug-ins. NP++ does not. I can use VSCode on both Windows and Linux. If I’ve got a desktop environment, I will hands down pick VSCode over NP++ every time.

        Otherwise, let’s be real, NeoVim is king.

        • kava@lemmy.world
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          NP++ was good 20 years ago during a time with much weaker competition and it’s been coasting on that good will ever since

          It’s OK for a text editor (compared to something totally basic like notepad) but other text editors have caught up in every single category

          like you said, VS Code is now the default go to code editor for a lot of people. if you don’t use VS Code, you use vim.

          for non-coding uses, I don’t see the functional difference between NP++ or something basic like Gnome’s text editor

          • ExFed@lemm.ee
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            3 days ago

            Completely agreed. At one point, maybe 12 years ago, I remember trying to learn NP++'s macro system. It was better than whatever we had at the time, but I’m glad I didn’t spend more time than I had to. Just a couple months ago, a coworker was raving about how great NP++ macros are … to do a task handily solved by some light regular expressions and/or column edit mode. Both REs and CEM are far more ubiquitous concepts than some bespoke, domain-specific language for defining repetitive tasks.

    • actaastron@reddthat.com
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      3 days ago

      I usually use my work laptop for personal bits and bobs which is Ubuntu but I turned on my personal Microsoft PC recently to do some stuff and couldn’t believe all the pop-ups and noise! I promptly moved all my data onto a external drive and did a fresh install of Ubuntu.

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      3 days ago

      All the Linux posts and Linux loving Lemmy users are what keep me away from Linux.

      They’re like the Rick and Morty fans of PC software

  • spooky2092@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 days ago

    Fucking click bait garbage article, but thankfully the article has a tldr at the top that basically contradicts the headline and saves you minutes of time to realize you’ve been baited;

    TL;DR: Microsoft has introduced a paywall for Notepad, requiring a Microsoft 365 subscription to access new features like the AI-powered Rewrite tool.

    Better headline: Microsoft forces you to pay to suffer through using their AI tool that no one asked for, application otherwise unchanged.