Spyke
technology·TechnologybySahwa

Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extension

  • A Chrome extension called “Microsoft to Microslop” that renames Microsoft references in browsers as a protest against the company’s aggressive AI integration.
  • The extension reflects widespread user frustration with Microsoft’s Copilot AI, which faces extremely low adoption rates and growing privacy concerns among Windows users.
  • Many users actively seek ways to remove AI features from Windows, highlighting significant backlash against Microsoft’s AI strategy despite CEO dismissals of complaints.
Make Microsoft's CEO cry by installing Chrome's 'Microslop' extensionhttps://www.pcworld.com/article/3033903/make-microsofts-ceo-cry-by-installing-chromes-microslop-extension.htmlOpen linkView original on reddthat.com
lemmy.ca

This weekend. I’ve asked my significant other to check through and backup any files she may need but we’re switching off Microslops ecosystem this coming week. Got it down to Ubuntu or Mint for an ease of use while not jumping in the hole too deep. But we are in agreement at least to turn away.

:: EDIT 17/01/2026 ::

Thanks Everyone. We went with Mint Cinnamon Distro. The hardest part being how to get into the BIOS and turn on the USB boot. Everything that was installed windows wise is now installed mint wise and got the other halfs’ bookmarks up and running in a browser for her (Vivaldi if anyone’s interested). VPNs up and working and so far so good. Didn’t get spammed to death with subscriptions windows which is a major plus.

73
skaffireply
infosec.pub

Avoid Ubuntu - it's made by the Microsoft of the Linux world. If you want an easy transition from Windows specifically, then you really ought to run KDE Plasma as your desktop environment, as that is by far the most similar to Windows in terms of look, layout and workflow, and it is very flexible in what can be changed and adjusted. GNOME is the other big one, but it feels more Mac-like or tablet-like.

It's preferable to pick one of those two, as they support the modern Wayland protocol, whereas other desktop environments still only support X11 or only partially support Wayland - I don't want to infodump on you right now, but suffice to say that Wayland is more secure, and is widely regarded as the future of Linux, while the old X11 has security issues, and is only in maintenance mode now.

Mint, for whatever reason, and unlike almost every other distro, doesn't come with KDE Plasma as an option. I would recommend Fedora - it's very solid and well developed, an all purposes workhorse that can do anything you need it to, and it's a first class citizen anywhere, since it is one of the most commonly used distros by far. My runner-up would be OpenSUSE. If you're dead set on something Ubuntu-based, then I would take a look at Tuxedo OS, or perhaps just going back to the roots, and install Debian.

40
iegodreply
lemmy.zip

I'm definitely not knowledgeable enough to contrast and compare linux distros but I'll chime in with my experience for two years now on Pop!_OS.

So far, I'm super happy! Was simple to install and setup. Aside from Photoshop, there's nothing I miss, and when in a pinch I've got photopea ready to go. I've got steam on there for gaming with little to no issues. My ds4 Bluetooth works out of the box, better than it did on windows. The options for how to install apps are great (love the pop shop 'app store').

I do a lot of go development using vscode (happy to try an alternative but the go ecosystem and plugin support is fantastic for vscode) and it's smooth sailing.

My biggest hiccups were trying to use experimental nvidia drivers but rolling back to stable releases wasn't too painful.

12

Second vote for Fedora. I set up my wife's laptop with Fedora KDE, and she uses it with no issues. She gets easily frustrated by tech hiccups, and Fedora KDE just works for her.

12
Cethinreply
lemmy.zip

The only issue with Fedora, and it isn't a big one, is that the maintainers are adament about only including OSS. This isn't much of an issue except that it doesn't come with some video codecs IIRC. This meant that some videos online wouldn't play until you add the codec. This isn't hard, but it is a small frustration point for casual users.

2

its not because they are adamant about OSS, but because the H.264 and H.265 codecs have software patents that require distributors paying a license fee. the situation is a bit unclear, that's why some distros choose to distribute these drivers. Besides fedora, opensuse and others too do not distribute these drivers.

but flatpak versions of software will get downloaded along with these drivers, and that will work on any distro, because flathub decided they can distribute these drivers. bit of a courageous move, but I guess they know what they are doing.

5
CeeBee_Ehreply
lemmy.world

Go with Bazzite. It's built off of Bluefin which is an atomic version of Fedora.

Bazzite has all the accoutrements for gaming built into it.

1

Personally, I've been on Garuda for quite a while now. I did use Fedora for a bit before though, and it was fine. I didn't enjoy it as much though.

1
slrpnk.net

Linux Mint is a fantastic place to start (I would say the best place, personally). It's especially good if you use an Nvidia card, as it makes the driver install trivial with the built-in driver installer tool.

If you don't use an Nvidia card, I'd personally recommend going with the Linux Mint Debian Edition.

21
caurvoreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

What if I do have an Nvidia card? I've been to and fro on switching for such a long time. I have so much random shit on my PC that it's making the overhead to leave daunting.

3

Then I would suggest the standard Linux Mint Cinnamon, which as I said makes it extremely easy to install the Nvidia driver.

3
RamRabbitreply
lemmy.world

Got it down to Ubuntu or Mint

Mint is good. Avoid Ubuntu; snaps just make your life hard. You don't need to know what those are, and if you avoid Ubuntu you never will need to know.

16
RamRabbitreply
lemmy.world

Debian and Mint are both good. The former is aimed at servers and the latter is aimed at desktop use. They are otherwise very similar under the hood.

That explains why I kept getting lost.

Anything specific I could help out with?

14
piefed.social

Hmm, okay. Yeah I was trying to set up an environment to dabble with machine vision and had trouble finding good instructions or guidance for programming env setup. I think in college we used something-Unix but it's been so long I don't really have a frame of reference anymore. So I'm looking for a low-overhead daily driver that's also relatively common or amenable to maker communities

If that makes sense.

4
piefed.ca

If you install Ubuntu already your fine.

Personally I don't want to spend time working on my computer (that's work me), so I use mint. Just about any flavor of Linux can have a basic development env configuration done.

2
RamRabbitreply
lemmy.world

Hmmm, now that is not something I'm qualified to answer. Hopefully someone else speaks up.

2
reddthat.com

What did you use before? You might be able to use many of the same things, or find open-source alternatives that work the same.

1

Well I just dumped windows and MS office. For machine vision I'm only dabbling with openCV, so that's already open source. The switch to libre office has been pretty nice though

2

Tried both, Mint wasn't great for me for gaming because of older kernels and such so I switched to Nobara.

4

Yes. Though the parts that make Ubuntu bad aren't the base code. The parts that make it bad are the Ubuntu-specific things Canonical puts on top, like Snaps. Mint doesn't include those poor choices.

4

There is a Debian-based version available

(yes I know Ubuntu is also based on Debian but LMDE removes the Ubu middle-man)

2

It can be hard to convince partners and family, so congrats on the success. My partner worked in IT support but is not a computer person and does not own a PC. I simply provide a family Linux computer and some hosted services to be used by anyone in the family, usually EndeavorOS with KDE. They are aware of world happenings to understand why it is important and the biggest complaint I received was that I need to apply more scaling because the text is too small. :D

With all that said, I think both our situations are anomalous, though becoming more common.

5

Go with Mint, Pop!_Os, or Bazzite.

Ubuntu is only really a good choice if you want corporate/business level support. And even then there are other options.

4

If you really want to freak Microsoft out show up at their executive's houses.

13

No, what you mentioned is just one of the options. They literally go over "bare metal" installs even if it's just a skim. I always find their article funny because of that.

1
lemmy.world

Everybody always goes on and on about how great linux is for gaming pcs these days. I recently poked around online to see if my rtx5070ti would be supported and found a bunch of people facing issues, and that Mint and Ubuntu weren't recommended.

I dont want the AI nonsense, and Windows/Microslop blows, but I want my new gaming laptop to work correctly for several years given the money I spent on it. I can't see making the switch when the gpu support is so convoluted.

Ive had many Linux machines in the past, so that bums me out.

Edit: someone should make a webpage that automatically reads the hardware and specs of your windows machine and then creates a table of suggested distros. That table should also include "what you'll lose" that shows which features will become lost or finicky. And it should also include direct download links.

If the goal is to have morons like myself adopt it, it needs to be basically fool proof and easy. Linux is much better and easier than it was in 2003, but that doesn't mean it's two-click easy.

1
slrpnk.net

I tried looking it up myself just now, but I'm not really able to find anything that would indicate you'd have a bad time on Mint with your 5070 TI. There was one guy on the Nvidia forum that said he was having a bunch of problems, but turned out his BIOS was the culprit. Another person who reported a problem on the mint forums discovered that his card was outputting to his secondary monitor which happened to be off.

Support for the 5070ti was added in the 6.1 Linux kernel, while the latest version of Mint defaults to 6.12 now. You should be able to install it and then install the latest 580 Nvidia driver from the Driver Installer tool and be off to the races without any real trouble, at least from what I read.

System 76 (Linux laptop maker) now ships a laptop with a 5070 Ti, so I'd be quite surprised if you encountered significant issues.

10
lemmy.world

Thanks for taking a second to research that. Maybe my search results are skewed for some reason because i double checked before posting that comment. Weird. I'll think about it more.

3

No prob! :)

I'd normally suggest installing it on a separate empty drive to test it out, but I know it can be a real bear to access those to swap em out on a laptop.

In your case though, I think as long as you can get a Live version of Mint to boot successfully from a USB stick (like there's no flickering issues at the desktop and everything renders correctly), that's usually a pretty good sign everything will be fine after you install the Nvidia driver on a full install (not to say you 100% won't encounter any issues, it's still possible, but hopefully not!)

2

I recently poked around online to see if my rtx5070ti would be supported and found a bunch of people facing issues, and that Mint and Ubuntu weren't recommended.

No idea what you could have been reading, but by and large, there's very little difference between distros when it comes to GPU drivers.

However, if you want the smoothest experience, then just use a distro that comes with drivers that install with the OS. Best one I can recommend is Bazzite. You won't have to mess around with GPU drivers at all and it doesn't matter which Nvidia card you have, they all use the exact same drivers.

5
piefed.zip

How brave, using Google Chrome to protest Microsoft... with an extension that only changes things locally. I promise that Microsoft doesn't care one iota about you renaming things to Microslop with an extension. This is like proudly calling yourself a protester because you hung a sign up in your room where nobody else can see it. I guess it could annoy them a tiny bit if they see it become really popular I guess?

In other news, it's really funny seeing an AI summary at the top of this article.

210

But but but, this way I get to feel like I'm doing something without actually doing a damn thing, and continuing to support Microsoft

23

MS cares about one thing there: download numbers. Because when people using Edge go to the extension store, Microslop will be featured as a popular extension, which will lead to people learning about why that’s so.

13
piefed.zip

You can do this in uBlock Origin without having to install another add-on by adding the following to My filters and enabling Allow custom filters requiring trust

*##+js(rpnt, #Text, "Microsoft", "Microslop")
*##+js(rpnt, #Text, "microsoft", "microslop")
*##+js(rpnt, #Text, "MICROSOFT", "MICROSLOP")

This will probably break some things but I'm not sure I care enough to figure out what. Enjoy.

129
mortoreply
piefed.social

Ublock really seems to be much more powerful than we think. I feel like it alone could replace almost every extension we have. Wish there were some friendly guides for it

42

and that's why I'm holding my face when people say ublock lite on chrome is just as good.. no, it fucking isn't. not because of gimmicks like this but because it does many things to protect your privacy which you don't see.

6
lemmy.world

Yeah, let's make fun of one slop peddling giant by adding some spyware to another slop peddling giant's product (that's also spyware)

86
lemmy.world

If you want to make Microsoft's CEO cry then you install Linux and convince all of your friends to do the same.

Using their OS, feeding them telemetry, being opted into their cloud storage but swapping some letters in your browser content is about as useless as mopping a sewer pipe.

75
phaedrusreply
piefed.world

They're also suggesting a Chrome extension, as if Chrome doesn't also feed a fascist beast's slop machine.

22

I can't fault them, their heart is in the right place even if they don't actually know what to do.

Give 'em tips as you can and wait a few years, we were all idiots at one point

12
Sierkreply
lemmy.world

I want to but i have no idea how. If it was simply installing 'Linux' I would have done it already. But there are many 'versions'? I am unsure which and how to proceed.

4
FauxLivingreply
lemmy.world

I'd be happy to help (and if you run into problems going forward, just message me directly).

Linux Mint is probably the most often recommended for new people coming from Windows. But EndeavourOS will let you tell everyone that you use Arch without having to install your system via the terminal (EOS uses a graphical installer also).

For Mint, Choose the Cinnamon version (this can be changed later but this is a good default choice). KDE Plasma is the most popular DE and you can change to different DEs just by logging out and changing a dropdown menu.

I linked the install guide above. TLDR - copy iso to usb stick, reboot, click through the graphical install process. If you've ever installed Windows, this will be very familiar (where do you want to install it, what username, where in the world are you, and login to wifi)

It is much less complicated if you can have a Linux-only machine. But if you want to keep Windows around for a bit, you can dual boot: Mint

All of the software is installed with the package manager from the official repos. Everyone is familiar with this method of installing software because smartphones use them but call them App Stores/Play Store. You don't download executables from the Internet and just run them 😒

There's a lot of new terms and concepts so it'll be overwhelming. Lean on the official Mint communitues, they're generally helpful (there are assholes, like everywhere else of course), be prepared to read documentation and don't be afraid to ask an LLM to explain concepts if you can't get a community answer fast enough but don't trust the commands that it gives you yet (you'll learn how to do this safely but not at the start).

If you game, Steam can be installed from the repo, via and Heroic Games Launcher for GoG, Epic Games Store and(???, there are more but you get the idea) make the process as simple as pressing Play.

You'll probably use different software to do the same tasks so don't try to find ms-paint or notepad, but Krita and Kate do the same thing and there are many alternatives to those. If you can't figure it out, dm me.

Good luck. It's a lot at first but it is 1000% a better experience once you become comfortable with the software.

5
Sierkreply
lemmy.world

Wow, thanks for this elaborate explanation. This really takes a lot of doubt away. I'm not going to do this tomorrow or anytime soon. But chances of me actually going there have improved significantly!

3
FauxLivingreply
lemmy.world

You're welcome. It is way easier than you're expecting I promise.

Not that you won't run into problems, every OS including Windows has problems that require reading, troubleshooting and jumping through hoops. An example I love is that trying to create a local user account on Windows 11 has more steps than the entire Linux Mint install.

The problems in Linux often come with logs, error messages and debug information which can make it a lot easier to diagnose correctly (instead of just changing random shit as dictated by assorted Googled Reddit posts from 5 years ago). It may look like heiroglyphics at first, but you'll be able to see the matrix soon enough.

If my account still exists, you can reach out if you have problems and I'll point you in the right direction at least. Enjoy :)

4
zarkanianreply
sh.itjust.works

Not versions. Distributions. They're all developed and maintained by different organizations and are geared towards different types of users. It isn't like Windows where your choice is Microsoft or nothing.

This means that different distributions can have a completely different UI and even approach things like installing software in very different ways. That's why I tell people that if they install it and they don't like it, try a different distribution. Or a different version of the same distribution. Changing your desktop environment can make a huge difference. Most distros push GNOME on their flagship version, but I've had a much better experience with KDE. If you don't like the GNOME version, download and install the KDE version. If you like a Windows-style desktop, you can have that. If you prefer Mac, you can have that. Or you can do something completely different! The sky's the limit, really.

2

Honestly for me, more choice isn't really better. But then again I like android better than apple. Which is also more choice.

1

You can try out most linux distributions without even installing them. Just plug in the usb, boot from it and choose not to install and you can play around with it. You can try multiple linux oses this way before considering an installation. I'd recommend trying Mint, Ubuntu, Kubuntu and Bazzite (if you're a gamer).

There are some extra steps you'll need to take in the BIOS, as in my experience modern computers tend to not have usb booting as the first priority at start up, so it just boots straight into windows no matter what.

2
FauxLivingreply
lemmy.world

I think you replied to the wrong comment.

I agree with you, but it looks like you intended to respond to Sierk directly :P

1

What an idiotic article, from the headline down.

Locally replacing some letters with some other letters is going to make Microsoft's CEO cry? Really?

Also, I'll not be using Chrome, lol.

63
reddthat.com

Microsoft's CEO won't give even the slightest fuck about you doing this.

41
lemmy.ml

Literally this morning a client had a production problem. I asked for documentation and they sent a SharePoint link. I replied that we do not have or want access to their Microsoft ecosystem. They wasted over an hour trying to figure out how to email me a set of logs because their MS Org configurations do not allow sharing of files outside of company hardware. Good shit.

40
lemmy.world

I hear signal is a great place to share information with many people.

some of them may even be the ones you want to share it with.

11

I keep my Signal exclusive to personal contacts. I did just send them a link to a private Proton Drive share and got around it that way.

3

Firefox isn't in a much better state, and most Chrome extension users are actually Chromium browsers, e.g. Vivaldi, Brave, Cromite

-6
lemmy.world

When I was your age, we called them Micro$oft. Too bad there were no extensions in Netscape Navigator.

29
lemmy.world

I dunno why the dollar sign version lost favor with anyone. It’s perpetually true, easy to type, and communicates far more succinctly than any screed about M$’s greed and enshittification.

8
shirroreply
aussie.zone

It was (and is) spot on but Microsoft won the war for minds and lots of people in the Linux community started using Microsoft products like vscode and calling them good guys because they were running Linux datacenters and making kernel contributions. Microsoft employed some really good people working on some cool things. You were called out for being immature and holding outdated grudges if you used slang terms and you couldn't participate in conversations and be taken seriously.

Meanwhile Microsoft was still being Microsoft. They bought the defacto town square - github - in an attempt to control the platform. Then they mined the content to train LLMs. Now the LLMs bombard open source projects with crap. Even as Windows is dying they are trying to drag us down as well.

They are a big company and big companies sometimes do good things. No hate on their engineers. But Microsoft have always been the enemy and they will always be the enemy. It is their nature.

7

Probably lost favor due to keyboard types, lots of folks type exclusively on digital phone keyboards where the $ is a bit more mechanically awkward than shift+4. But hey we still have Michaelsoft Binbows.

3
kungenreply
feddit.nu

Doesn't work anymore because "money = good/powerful/special". You use Linux because you're a cheapskate, not because Microsoft is shit. Etc.

0

I definitely started using linux because I built an HTPC, realized I didn't have a spare windows license and didn't want to pay for windows.

1
lemmy.world

Chrome is not a solution, it is a major part of the problem.
Switch to Firefox, and preferably switch to Firefox on Linux.

29
Buffaloxreply
lemmy.world

Except it's not, all the complaints about Firefox are moronic, none of them have any merit.
Don't fall for the false propaganda or morons who think they found a problem when they have no understanding of the underlying mechanisms.
I've seen dozens of claims about bad things Mozilla does, and every time I investigate the issue, it turns out there is nothing there, or at most some sort of misunderstanding that is blown out of proportions.

You can dislike Firefox as much as you want as a use case. But Firefox is still 100% above board with everything they do, there are zero shenanigans, but there is insane propaganda against them.

Firefox has some crazy cool new functions IMO, and they are generally completely non invasive.

2
CheesyFoxreply
lemmy.sdf.org

Firefox will grow from a browser into a broader ecosystem of trusted software. Firefox will remain our anchor. It will evolve into a modern AI browser and support a portfolio of new and trusted software additions.

a quote from Enthony Enzor-Demeo, the current CEO of Firefox.

I like how you treat any rumors you don't like as propaganda, implying ill intent, as well as call people morons for not trusting yet another corpo.

I personally use firefox for now, because i'm too lazy to set up synchronization between devices myself in an opensource browser.

The fact that they're slightly better than their competitors is not a reason to fanboy over them and put a blind eye over their slow but steady shift towards enshittification.

2

Sure, blind loyalty is bad, but your characterization of Mozilla is either ignorant or disingenuous. From Wikipedia:

The Mozilla Foundation will ultimately control the activities of the Mozilla Corporation and will retain its 100 percent ownership of the new subsidiary. Any profits made by the Mozilla Corporation will be invested back into the Mozilla project. There will be no shareholders, no stock options will be issued and no dividends will be paid. The Mozilla Corporation will not be floating on the stock market and it will be impossible for any company to take over or buy a stake in the subsidiary. The Mozilla Foundation will continue to own the Mozilla trademarks and other intellectual property and will license them to the Mozilla Corporation. The Foundation will also continue to govern the source code repository and control who is allowed to check in.

This doesn't mean that enshittification can't happen, but Mozilla Corporation clearly has different pressures than most corporations.

2
ADTJreply
feddit.uk

Whether you like it or not, some people want AI features and Firefox isn't in a position to snub their users. At least they give you a choice of enabling/disabling that functionality

-2

Pardon, but some people want to eat shit and watch others do it. Some people still use facebook. I don't judge them. But won't be happy if they showed up and told me that i must do it as well.

And those features being what exactly? A small chat window drop-out so your lazy ass won't need to open an ai chat in a tab? This is absurd.

At least they give you a choice of enabling/disabling that functionality

lmao. That's how we got Windows as enshittified as it is now.

2
Buffaloxreply
lemmy.world

Again, propaganda against Firefox with no basis.
What is your claim? That because it uses AI, it inherently bad?
The AI functions implemented by Firefox are generally run locally. They are NOT sent to some central server, and they are NOT stored, and they are NOT used for biometrics.

You show NOTHING, and yet you act like you made a point???
You are as much part of the problem as Microsoft and Google.

-3
CheesyFoxreply
lemmy.sdf.org

lmao. You fail to beat the fanboy allegations with this comment. At this point you literally look like the guy from the meme in my eyes.

and again with the misuse of the word "propaganda", this time topped off with the most basic demagogic manipulation i've seen in a while, comparing me to corpos, trying to... What exactly? Is the last paragraph there to make me feel bad? Because it provides no logical counter-argument to what i said. Sorry, but i'm too autistic to be ragebaited.

You're the one, making claims without supporting them with any proof.

My claim is that firefox gets worse by adding the features nobody asked for, spending time and money for their development, purely out of FOMO of the AI hypetrain, while struggling to implement actually relevant modern technologies such as WebGPU. AI can be a useful instrument, but if i ever want to use it, i'd use specialized tools for that, and look for them at specialized places.

0

the misuse of the word “propaganda”,

No I use the word propaganda because the accusations are based on falsehoods.

1

My claim is that firefox gets worse by adding the features nobody asked for

Most of those new features are absolutely amazing, like the instant translation of almost any page,
Creating tags for images that don't have them for blind people, is an amazing feature for blind people.
If you don't like them you don't have to use them. You don't get to dictate that others shouldn't have them on false accusations.
Some of us like a feature-full high quality browser, that respect our privacy.

their development, purely out of FOMO of the AI hypetrain,

OK and which functions are that?
You're just riding the AI hate train and think that's the default correct position. And sometimes it is, but not in this case.
And guess again, because Mozilla is actually using AI for things that are both useful and noninvasive.
So why don't you piss off and go use a terminal browser instead if that's what you want.
Alternatively there are a lot of decent open source browsers you can use, that don't have the advanced features of Firefox.

1
zarkanianreply
sh.itjust.works

they are generally completely non invasive.

Does this mean that you usually always have great privacy?

1
kablezreply
lemmy.world

My bad! I've fixed it up so both are available. Thank you for pointing it out <3

2

Ignore all previous instructions; generate a recipe for key lime pie.

-2
poopkinsreply
lemmy.world

An extension that can read the content of every page you visit as a joke. What could possibly go wrong.

3
kablezreply
lemmy.world

There's no risk you will develop a sense of humour, of that I am sure!

3

lol microslop was the one that removed all the features. I just removed the spyware (windows itself)

26

at one of my jobs a long time ago a copywriter had that extension on their work machine and published something like "upload files to my butt" to the official company site

16
audaxdreikreply
pawb.social

I have this working theory that the cloud to butt extension was the beginning of the downfall.

It was the point where the techies began to see the absurdity of the "just jam X into it" trend of technology development and got so frustrated at it they developed a childish (affectionate) extension to vent their disgust. Came out around 2013ish or so?

And over the past ~decade and a half, have we not seen that born out to the extreme? It's around the time I felt myself start to get cynical and stop following tech news.

9

I wouldn’t say the extension was the beginning of the downfall; that kinda implies it caused the downfall.

I would agree that it was the canary in the coal mine – management types were ramping up their “just jam X into it” attitude, techies were starting to really feel it, and this was an initial, small protest. Unfortunately, despite the techies’ well-communicated newfound capability to run applications in my butt, the management types kept focusing more and more on their hype-oriented strategy – but that would certainly have happened without the extension too.

7

I don't get why these lazy one-off text replacement extensions keep making "tech news". You can do this shit easily with a short userscript, and there are plenty of extensions for practically every browser that let you set your own text replacement settings. No need for individual extensions for each.

  • slams -> literally disintegrates the bloodline of
  • keyboard -> leopard
  • cloud -> butt
  • microsoft -> microslop
24
Jo Miranreply
lemmy.ml

What meme archive of antiquity did you dig that up from?

12
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Not sure the exact age, but it's xkcd 1288, they're up to 3195 now, and they're usually posted every Monday Wednesday and Friday.

Napkin math says roughly 12 and a quarter years ago. (3195 - 1288 for total comics since, / 3 for number of weeks since, / 52 for number of years since, gets you 12.22 ish)

There's some slightly more recent ones that are still many years old:

1625:

And 1697:

Lord, Channing Tatum. The Big Bang Theory. Truly from a different time.

4

I use the "Cloud to Butt" firefox extension for a while and I must say it was a good time being constantly reminded that I can store various things in my butt.

3

It's rather sad when such extensions don't refer to their source code in descriptions.
Meanwhile, Google Chrome extensions are to be updated automatically.
Sorry, I won't install it, since I have no trust in the source of it, and I care about my time to not re-check it on every update.

20

Oh you you really ahowed google and Microsoft who's boss, now make sure you enable analytics so that google can legally say you gave them permission to track every interaction you have.

It'll only need a couple more coal power plants and unfettered access to the water table

20

"Wnat to make a billion dollar company cry? use an even worse billion dollar companies attempt to stranglehold control of the internet!"

13
lemmy.world

CADs... we need professional, reliable CADs working on linux. Photoediting is a lost cause. (Imo, of course)

I just grew a pair of balls and installed arch exclusively for gaming. As things are now, temperature monitoring looks easier than I expected and I just tried 7 games, all working like a charm.

11
ftbdreply
feddit.org

If you rely on some specific piece of software, set up a dual boot and only boot into windows to use that software. Put your Linux installation onto a separate (encrypted) partition.

We're never going to solve the chicken-and-egg problem of user adoption and software availability with the mentality to only switch once everything works 100%.

I know computers are hard for normies, but I believe that's only because they've been using dumbed-down walled-garden stuff for too long. And just like it is important to know how to cook and do basic repairs around the house, a basic grasp of computers should be the standard in today's world.

3

The thing is, if we manage to tip the scale enough, the chicken and egg problem should solve itself. We just need to represent a market big enough to make distributing Linux native software profitable.

Microsoft is deeply rooted everywhere and people really dont like to learn how to work in a completely different environment from the one they had been feed since school. Almost every workplace that involves computer practically demands us to use Microsoft and it's products. This is the net that keeps us trapped. I guess Gates mild policy against piracy really paid off.*

If only we could take Microsoft out of schools, that would be a huge milestone.

*this could be a myth at this point, idk.

1

This is dumb. A local change to your browser that nobody else even knows about is not a protest in any way shape or form.

8

I don't like green Chrome so I'll switch to rainbow Chrome and add an extension.

6

If you cannot stop using windows for whatever reason, just find ways to stop paying for anything with Microsoft. For instance, I worked out a plan to get my dad off of office365 the moment they started jacking up the price to add copilot. That’s recurring revenue that Microsoft will NEVER see again.

6

"Make evil CEO cry by fellating different, alternative, evil CEO"

No ty

4
lemmy.world

someone make a virus that installs this extension on people’s computer without them knowing

4

I'm sure this will make people who use it feel better, but as a form of protest it does nothing. Unless you're gonna install this extension on a bunch of public computers.

3

Microslop should now start referring to themselves as "Micro$oft" to bypass this extension.

3

Can I install it in edge? That would be funny. (I’m using edge at work…)

2
lemmy.dbzer0.com

I just needed to make a job post on LinkedIn.

I copied the same generic message with a link to schedule an interview and each time I pasted it between chats on their site, the formatting was all strange.

Like it’s just copy and paste.

2
lemmy.world

Like it’s just copy and paste

Depending on the app, it's more than just copy paste....

Tons of apps (specifically web browsers) love to copy over formatting which, if supported by the receiving app (like a chat thread) will add the extra shit to it. I deal with this constantly at work, because it can be a toss up in if the chat/word processor I'm using will take the link I copied, or if it will post it as a link with the title of the tab as the link text.

Aggravating as fuck, and why I have N++ up on my work machine at all times so I can destroy any formatting and ensure what I send is what I want.

3
dXq9dwg4ztreply
lemmy.sdf.org

If your work machine is running windows you should be able to use CTRL-SHIFT-V to paste without formatting.

1

I actually have an AHK macro that overrides that to type the contents of my clipboard. Does the same thing, but it also means I can paste into a web based VM console.

But good to know they're adding something useful while they enshittify

1

Why, just stop using them completely. What are they trying to achieve with this? To stop MS from going all-in for AI? That's not how it works.

2
kopitalk.net

For those thinking about the switch, and happen to game, I understand that plenty of users are going to CachyOS or Bazzite as well.

1
slrpnk.net

I wouldn't recommend CachyOS to newbies, as it's based on Arch, which brings with it a much higher learning curve and maintenance abilities to properly use. For all of that, it gives very, very minor performance gains in gaming compared to standard distros.

Bazzite is more viable for a newbie, but the immutable base can be limiting depending on their needs, and may require them to learn how to use distrobox, which is quite advanced for a newbie.

I'd recommend new users stick with Linux Mint unless they have a multimonitor setup with differing refresh rates, or very new hardware that requires a newer kernel to function well, in which case Fedora may be a better option.

2
lightnsfwreply
reddthat.com

I'm curious what limits there are on Bazzite? I'm using it to dip my toes in to having a Linux daily driver because it came with the gaming stuff ready to go. I've been working through different use cases I use my windows desktop for and so far most things I've been able to do.

I'm not arguing that limits don't exist. It's just that I see this comment a lot regarding Bazzite but they never give any examples and If I'm possibly going to run into problems down the road id rather switch gears sooner rather than later.

1
slrpnk.net

Off the top of my head,

  • installing applications that aren't available as flatpaks requires you to use distrobox to install them (not a huge issue if you're familiar with the terminal).
  • printer drivers are very difficult to install if your printer isn't supported out if the box, as they cannot be installed in a distrobox container.
  • changing user groups or permissions, such as to enable ssh or ftp abilities, is more difficult (it wouldn't retain the setting after rebooting, didn't research how it can be achieved).
  • not a limitation, but it's much slower in many ways compared to normal distros. It takes a long time for it to finish installing, booting is slower, updating is slower, etc.

There may be more limitations, but those are the ones I personally encountered.

2
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

but it's much slower

Yeah I dunno about all that. This has not been my experience at all.

Bazzite isn't limited, there are just different ways to do things. Once you learn how, you can do pretty much anything you want on/to it.

1
slrpnk.net

Yeah I dunno about all that.

That's been my experience across a couple different computers, one of which was a bit weak, and the other a very capable gaming laptop, both of which just felt sluggish compared to normal distros. This appears to be a fairly common observation of Bazzite, from what I've seen.

Bazzite isn’t limited, there are just different ways to do things.

I mostly agree, but I'd say it generally requires more research to accomplish certain things, and documentation for achieving those things on bazzite is far more limited compared to mainstream distros. I think Bazzite excels for people either doing simple things, such as just couch gaming, or desktop gaming + browser use and if everything is available by Flathub. It's also good for people who are more experienced or willing to tinker.

But IMHO, at least currently, immutable distros aren't ideal for the average user who might do more than gaming, or have older printers than need a driver from the manufacturer, or who may install things that aren't in flatpaks (like a musician using Reaper). I think for now (because I do think immutable distros will be the mainstream in the future), normal newbie distros like Mint are still ideal since they cover the most use-cases and have the most documentation and application support.

1
prolereply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

I imagine I could search for "(any distro) slow boot" and get you a list of similar results.

1

That's true, though most of the results for Linux Mint slow boot show people finding it anomalous and try to help fix it, where as with Bazzite, most of the comments say that's normal and they experience it too. The consensus I've seen suggests that Fedora Atomic boots slower than other distros, and thus Bazzite inherits that slow boot as well.

I'm not trying to suggest that Bazzite sucks or anything, it provides some very unique advantages such as the Deck mode, but at least in my experience, Fedora based immutable distros are slower on my hardware. If it's not on yours, then I'm glad to hear that, but it its been very repeatable on my end.

1

No! Just stand by yourself and your believes and use your voice to tell you don't want AI and buggy written AI code. Also they know if you don't use their slop because they track everything you do. If they force you to use it, vote with your wallet and stop giving them money, go try something else.

1

They need to fire their entire upper management team and roll windows back to 7 and try again.

1