It is strange to read an article detailing exactly why and how Microsoft has lost its way, leading to products that really just aren't good any more, all the way through to academic critiques of Microsoft's AI push (though, I'll note, the article goes out of its way to not mention Emily Bender).... only to read in the closing lines that the author is completely unwilling to even try Linux.
Like, fine, you do you. I've argued before that Windows' dominance is a threat to civil liberties, and that that threat is a systemic problem that also includes an individual component, but still. Not everyone is willing to tackle every problem, I get it.
But it's just such a clear example of *why* tech companies get to be the way they are without repercussions: there's no mainstream analysis that can end with seeking alternatives outside of corporate tech.
Hell, the author may have really good reasons for sticking with Windows, lots of people have professional needs that tie them to the platform, I get it! But that juxtaposition still strikes me: Windows sucks, here's why, and no, I'll never try to get away from it. The analysis stops before understanding what forces and power structures keep the author on Windows — again, you do you, not every article has to be complete. The omission still feels poignant, though.
Maybe putting it a different way, the article in question and the stock advice "just use Linux" fail in the same way: they don't conceive of a world in which Linux is an alternative that can exist and that can be arrived at through an analysis of power structures without needing to assume it at the outset.
Open source isn't an axiom, and we've seen what happens when it's taken that way. But nor can adherence to corporate power be an axiom.
@burnitdown @xgranade IMO the safest path for regular users is to buy a preloaded computer from one of the many vendors out there like @system76 No need to do anything fancy and it comes preloaded with an approachable desktop environment.
@burnitdown @xgranade @system76 Less than a new macbook but I agree it'd be better if folks reused hardware. I think businesses would have the highest impact rather than household consumers.
@burnitdown @xgranade Also for repairability and upgrades the @frameworkcomputer computers are decently priced and so easy to use https://frame.work/ca/en/laptop13
@mauve @xgranade @system76
how much does that cost?