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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 4th, 2022

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  • GrappleHat@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlHow bad is Microsoft?
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    5 months ago

    A coworker recently sent me a Word document with edits and comments they had added. When I downloaded & opened it (in Word on Windows!) it told me that it had the edits/comments but it wouldn’t let me see them unless I log in to my Microsoft account and then view it online in the web version of Word. What the actual removed?

    removed that. I responded to my coworker and asked them to just send me the edits via email in plain text. I’m not winning popularity contests at work, but what the removed Microsoft?


  • If you’re nervous about the switch consider dual-booting. Then you’re not fully committed to the switch & you can have your old Windows system back whenever you want it.

    Main steps are:

    • Run a defrag on your Windows machine to physically consolidate all your Windows data to one area.
    • Break that partition into two (Linux will go one the new empty side)
    • Install Linux from a USB as normal, but don’t choose to wipe your drive completely. Choose a manual option instead where you specifically indicate your intended Linux partition from above.
    • Optional: Once installation is complete you can set up another partition to hold files which can be available to both OSs.
      • Boot into Linux & define the remaining unused space in the Linux partition as a new NTFS partition & give it a name which makes it obvious what it is (i.e. “sharedspace”)
      • Then boot into Windows and move the existing data you’d like to share between OSs here (work documents, movies, music, etc.)

    Some useful links:





  • I use Linux at the office. I’m the only employee at my company who does.

    I haven’t had many issues collaborating with others using libreoffice while they use MS office. I do keep a Windows VM running for those somewhat rare instances where I need Windows for something though. I also needed to invest quite some time to figure out Linux alternatives for everything (how to use company VPN, how to get MS Teams working, how to connect to network drives, etc).

    But so far so good. Been 100% Linux at work for maybe ~1.5 years?




  • GrappleHat@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.mlQuestion about Proton
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    1 year ago

    https://www.protondb.com/ is an excellent resource. Before you commit to Linux, look up your favorite games there to double check that they’ll work.

    My personal experience is basically all games work on Linux. To the point I don’t even look games up on protondb before I buy. The exceptions seem to be multiplayer FPS games which use anti-cheat (but I don’t play those kinds of games).