It's not useless. It will enable MS to build the walled garden they want, where you are forced to use the software they permit you to and nothing else.
Mine said I couldn't upgrade because of the no TPM thing. Turns out it's just off by default on a lot of mobos.
Secondly, there's a program called Rufus that can create a bootable flash drive with Windows 11 but removes stuff like the TPM requirements, the need for Microsoft account sign in, all the bad stuff etc
I'd been avoiding it for a year until I learned about Rufus but now that I've installed it, you know what? Without all the bloat, it's a fucking smooth OS. Really excellent multitasking windows and fast too
Lemmy shits on it because "muh Linux" but if you install it right, it's fucking excellent for the vast, vast majority of people
How do you find the original ISO and not a cracked one?
Get instructions to modify the ISO
Hope you get the right set of instructions from a genuine website
Download Rufus and install
Make backup of their data
Hope you disabled Bitlocker also
Reboot and press the F? key to change boot order (F? varies from system to system)
How do you even find the right key for this?
Follow the installation process
One of the reasons Linux is not widespread is because following these "simple" instructions is too much for an average user. So I doubt a Windows user will be bothered to modify their OS.
I have installed different variants of Linux 100s of time and even I need to check online if their are any hidden gotchas.
Yup, that's why I got a Mac. It works perfectly out of the box, no rugged edges apps, no drivers/hw concerns, excellent battery time. Best UNIX laptop for the time being.
I give you as main flaws the cost and the irreparability of the hardware and maybe missing out on a few games but that is probably a tie with Linux, since it runs the same emulators/transcoder if needed.
maybe missing out on a few games but that is probably a tie with Linux
As some one who runs both: no, not even close. Mac has more direct ports than Linux true, but proton vastly outweighs that. I have dozens of games that show up on steam on my mac as unplayable where as I dont have any that wont run under proton.
Five years ago you'd probably have been right, but Linux is far superior to OSX for gaming now.
(E: assuming you're talking about an apple silicon macbook, IDK the status of proton on x86 macs maybe it works there?)
I'll give you that as I honestly don't care much about games so I don't know much. I've read somewhere that apple has a game porting toolkit similar to proton and whisky was good enough the one time I wanted to launch a windows one but I don't know if it's any good.