• Sybs@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The barriers are still too steep. My Ubuntu machine updated it’s kernel and then refused to boot after that. I had to look up how to manually lock the old working kernel.

    Windows has never completely broken itself on an update for me.

    If that happened to my parents they’d be angrily driving to the shop to get another cheap windows laptop.

    • expr@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      We have a phrase for a bricked windows install: it’s called the Blue Screen of Death. It’s not like Windows never gets fucked either.

      I’ve personally never had such an issue upgrading Linux.

      • DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        The BSoD isn’t always a bricked Windows machine, it’s often just an OS crash that causes you to restart the system.

    • yuriy@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Funny, I switched to Ubuntu because my brand new laptop was continually bricking with Windows 10, specifically due to Windows Update.

      Roundabouts the time period of the forced Windows 10 update I had a desktop and laptop BOTH completely break, booting only to a black screen on startup, having received somewhere around half of an update I had no say in.

      I’d like to think they’ve learned their lesson. I’d like to think I could safely leave a windows computer on overnight without waking up to a surprise new version, or bricked PC. But even having that as an outside possibility is enough to turn me off windows entirely.

    • HERRAX
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      1 year ago

      It’s probably very uncommon, but me and a friend both switched to Linux on our gaming machines recently because windows 11 kept removing our AMD GPU drivers. Meanwhile I’ve been using Linux on secondary machines without any issues for quite some time (except for when I’ve been experimenting with arch, but that’s on me lol)