If it is not sensitive data, and you're okay being morally objectionable, you can buy a large hard drive from some place with a good return policy, transfer your data to it, format/repartition your drive, transfer everything back and return the hdd for a 15% stocking fee.
I mean yeah, but also that's the worst dystopian nightmare I've ever heard.
"How can I change my desktop background?" "There are four ways to change your desktop background, which would you like to hear more about?"
These clowns can't make all your settings in one place.
I can't imagine anyone gaming on this. But, I'm stoked for multiple vendors offering ARM devices since the MS/Qualcomm deal is done.
I'm excited about a thin tiny laptop, with great battery life, that runs my code.
So people not understand the main benefits of the Steamdeck are: It's cheap It doesn't use windows.
Like honestly, GPD has been making solid windows handhelds for years, but they've never been a popular as now because of these two things.
Package it up and return to sender.
This is from the only episode of Camp Caribou I remember.
I worked so hard for so long that I'm like this and it's awful.
When I get time off, I don't know what to do with myself. Right now I have a full time night/ weekend job and I'm attending university with 5 courses. This summer I'm considering picking up another job because I won't know what to do with myself.
"The good news is we have a console for people without internet access, it's called Xbox 360"
First their drm is based around the assumption that you're a criminal, and now this. I'm kinda glad I didn't buy it.
I use fedora on my thinkbook with Gnome/PaperWM and my upgrade experience was ezpz.
It's a little bit more than "your os knows everything you do".
Copilot for Windows isn't the same thing as Copilot for 365, although it's similar, and the system requirements only apply if you tell it to process locally. My understanding of the docs is Copilot is cloud based by default.
The issue isn't smooth brained luddites, it's smooth brained casuals giving condom over their personal information to a corporation that has a fiduciary responsibility to profit and grow.