He did on one from I think 9 years ago of his authentic Canadian experience or something like that. Yep, I found it here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-N7FNbdqS09w.html
@@ejokurirulezz My Windows told me my PC is not good enough to have windows 11 so I can never update to it, even though I have a hyper-powerful 666 karat gold gaming laptop. Maybe the real reason is that I disabled all the spying options in the settings, so Microsoft decided I'm a bad person and I don't deserve to get their new product for free.
This happened to me a few times, but it NEVER happened again. I neutered my windows copy pretty fast after it started pulling this stuff by modifying the registry, I update when I want to now. It's literally my computer, it's MY choice not theirs!
@@TikaSplat as other person pointed out, it stands for trusted platform module, it's used for security, it's a component included on most motherboards and some CPUs, that part isn't important, the important part is that win11 requires it but you can disable it in your BIOS settings, and if you disable it, windows will detect that your computer isn't compatible with win11 and will stop giving you pop-ups to upgrade to an OS that your computer "doesn't" support
@@GSBarlev I doubt it, if only because most hermits edit their own videos and the only professional video editor that runs on Linux is DaVinci Resolve and most people don’t use that so it’d be unfamiliar to them.
Just be me, and have such an old and shitty computer that it can literally *not* update to windows 11. But for real, the entire windows operating system *IS* malware. I’ve gone as far as to manually disable the windows update service, only for it to somehow turn itself back on after I went to bed and immediately update the system afterwards. That was a fun--and not at all absolutely infuriating--surprise the next morning! If you consider malware to include something that disrupts the usage of your system, forces unwanted changes upon it, and harvests personal data to be sold to third parties then windows quite literally has malware built into its very OS. I keep telling myself that I just need to bite the bullet and learn to use Linux, but it’s just so easy to stay in the current abusive relationship that I have with windows instead.
TL;DR - Linux is a way to free yourself from Microsoft and Apple, it gives you back the freedom personal computers used to have, but with almost all the modern amenities. You'll learn, have fun, and be part of a growing community of other people that share a lot in common with you. I hope to see you all come along! P.s. I ranted a bit in this, but didn't delete it because I believe that if you have ever thought about switching to Linux, you'll probably hear a lot of yourself in my rant, and have joy in the wins I felt by switching. It most definitely is malware! They spy on you constantly (and it gets worse all the time), they eat up all your computers resources (huge bloat on CPU and RAM especially), and you have no sovereignty over YOUR computer because Microsoft wants to jam its greedy fat fingers into every aspect of your system. I greatly support your switch to Linux my friend! Any distro is learnable, and for someone that is even remotely proficient with computers (i.e., can handle Windows decently), can use a "just works" distro. You will get comfortable much more quickly than you think. My personal recommendation though is ~ Linux Mint ~ I daily drive this distro and have for well over a year with effectively no issues at all! Linux Mint is designed to be as close to feeling like Windows as possible, while still giving you the power and control of Linux. One example of something that was amazing to me: I now use less than 1% of my CPU at startup and when idling, and I use 1500mb of RAM at idle (but I use plugins that use extra RAM!). One top of that, I had to click two buttons to get a customizable resource monitor on my panel (basically the Windows Taskbar), on windows I could only access that using the stupid "Windows gaming overlay" and there was really no nice way to get it to stay on my screen at all. It frustrated me to high hell that, that wasn't a super easy setting considering that Windows will shovel crap no one wants on their machines, but ohhh no, we can't possibly have a resource monitor that integrates with the screen nicely. Contrary to what you'll hear all over the place, the Linux community is often very welcoming and driven by what I said earlier, COMMUNITY, not some corporate machine that has contempt for you. It's a great way to learn about computers, have YOUR hardware back in your control, and most importantly you are a part of something fun and interesting, re-imagining the face of "retail computing". For me, the best part was realizing one day that I no longer find myself going "God! This is so stupid why is ______ like this!" to "hmm I think I'll change that" because you can change just about everything about your Linux machine, because its YOURS! I sincerely hope you join the community, and I hope it is as rewarding and freeing for you as it was for me!
You can install a Linux without removing your existing Windows! You can choose between the OSs at boot time, it displays a little menu with a timeout and a default option of your choice. I highlestly recommend giving Linux a try, it's really usable, but more importantly, it teaches you how your computer works on a deeper level. Or at least that's my experience with it, but I'm a computer scientist, so I have an above-average affinity for this sorta stuff to begin with.
yea and personally every time i update my computer gets super... 'buggy' and i end up having to find out what part of the update broke everything and spend hours trying to figure out how to do a partial install. than in 3 days when it forces update again it reinstall the broken update and i have to start the process over again because after the original one there is another part that is breaking everything... updates are just the worst.
Oh nice, you're carrying all the bugs and serious security vulnerabilities of the past 8 years around with you! Not updating your OS is, unfortunately, not the way to go. Neither is what Windows does, of course. Personally, I'm using Arch (btw), and I wrote a little script that runs at login and reminds me when I haven't upgraded my system in 5 days. I can ignore that and upgrade whenever the hell I please, but most importantly, I can do literally anything else on my computer while pacman is fetching and installing updates in the background. All upgrades take effect immediately without needing to reboot (except for the kernel itself).
The frequent inconvenience of windows that causes unending frustration? ok fine Spending like an hour to change operating systems that will in the long run save me more time and headaches? absolutely not!
This is why you disable tpm in the bios, it isn't hardly usefull for much, and if you really need it then might as well make a second machine for it. Soon windows is gonna have to update their name to broken glass with how terrible their OS can be.