• Riskable
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    1461 month ago

    Linux users: “See what we mean?”

    Windows users: “La la la! I can’t hear you! Losing my data is clearly better than having to learn something new!”

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      Linux users: “See what we mean?”

      Windows users: “La la la! I can’t hear you! Losing my data is a standard Windows feature!”

      • Otter
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        13
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        1 month ago

        Your account seems to be marked as a bot, you can fix that in your user settings if it was unintentional

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      I have literally never had one of these things happen to me before. I’m pretty sure people just make them up for clicks at this point.

        • @[email protected]
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          101 month ago

          the 16-bit Windows on Windows subsystems, which allowed 32-bit versions of Windows to directly run 16-bit DOS and Windows programs

          Jesus, what a scam. Why does anyone put up with this?

      • @[email protected]
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        141 month ago

        This was an issue that appeared when writing heavy files to disks (50gb+), so people that werent doing it were safe. And don’t worry, its a matter of when LOL. I was a windows “virgin” until one day my system drive appeared encrypted and locked by bitlocker when I never activated it, nor had any recovery key.

        • @[email protected]
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          -21 month ago

          That’s not how it works lol. It doesn’t just randomly encrypt your hdd and lock you out lol. User error.

      • @[email protected]
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        171 month ago

        Linux treats users like a person and Windows treats users like children. Be the person Linux trusts you to be.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        There is a difference between telling your computer to delete something and the computer complying, and doing a windows update only to find it’s corrupted your data or straight up killed your disk.

        I’m not going to get angry when I tell my PC to delete a file and it actually does it.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 month ago
        $ su -
        # rm -rf —no-preserve-root /
        

        Should do the trick. (Obviously don’t try it unless you know what you are doing and know what may happen when it hits your EFI variables.)

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        I love how people immediately downvoted you to hell for this lmfao.

        Like yeah, the guys on the comments: only people use rm -rf, absolutely no scripts use it at all. Something like motherfucking STEAM absolutely didn’t remove people’s data that one time. And hey, their so beloved --no-preserve-root didn’t prevent that from happening. :D

        I love and currently use Linux, but my GOD some Linux people are annoying.

        If something like del C:\*.* somehow ended up deleting your D: drive too, we wouldn’t stop hearing the end of it, but here on Linux systems, it is a perfectly normal thing, and people somehow DEFEND this atrocity lmfao.

        rm shouldn’t exist at its current form. Full stop.