Greetings! Recently, i have ditched Windows for Linux. Why? Well, This all started with a Windows Update. I was working on a Discord bot, until my PC decided to restart without my consent. What was it? A Windows Update. I was like: “no big deal, ill just wait”. Well, it was over 100+ updates. After all the updates completed, i saw the Windows 11 setup screen. Keep in mind that I was on WIndows 10 before the updates. Now at that point i really got angry. Like, I hate Windows 11. So then i went and completed the setup, and got met with ALL THE BLOATWARE REINSTALLED. So ofcourse, since i did NOT wanna use Windows 11, i backed up my data, and switched to the Secure and Free operating System, Linux. I went with arch, since i have used Ubuntu before, and it’s terrible. And since i didn’t wanna use any fancy Desktop Enviroments, such as GNOME, KDE, HyprLand, XFCE. I went with dwm. It looks very mininal and customizable.

Now that brings me to the question, What apps should i get rid of?

I know i did the same post like a few weeks ago, but for the sake of Privacy, i know Some apps contain Telemetry, and some Don’t. But still.

    • horse_battery_staple@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      With the right amount of customization yeah it can look really fancy. I could be mistaken but I recall Elementary OS’ Pantheon came from xfce/xubuntu originally.

      However I’m still partial to KDE/Plasma personally as it does 99% of what I need out of the box.

      That’s the great thing about Linux though. It’s exactly as bespoke and custom as you want to make it.

      • Lemongrab@lemmy.one
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        3 months ago

        Sadly, KDE Plasma has not yet secured the windowing protocols, so applications can freely record your screen. Only GNOME stops this ATM. Not a deal breaker, and KDE plans on improving this. Still a security risk.

  • RmDebArc_5@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Discord would be the obvious answer, but I understand why you might want to use it, my recommendation is using a client that disables some of the tracking like Vesktop. Spotify is also a major privacy concern, it can be replaced by Spotube (and to a lesser degree by Audiotube) which removes most tracking and is three and convenient. Also I’m not sure if I would keep using chromium, especially with manifest V3

      • toastal@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        Or XMPP or IRC or Mumble …all of which have clients that will consume less resources on your machine

    • fairchild@sopuli.xyz
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      1 month ago

      Discord, definitely!! It might be hard to ditch but it’s worth trying. I was never a big fan of it so it was kinda easy yet I still miss being able to contact some people on there. But the more people continue using it, the harder it will be to change things.

      Spotify and Chromium, I agree on both as well. Try the options mentioned above concerning Spotify. And yeah, Music streaming is a hard one… I have a dedicated mobile device for Music streaming platforms of this kind if I feel the itch as well as a modded ipod for on the go. Highly recommend getting into a habit of buying Music (digital/physical) and listening stuff you actually own on desktop. Simple cmus or sth will do the job.

      Maybe Librewolf or other Firefox fork for Browser.

      Edit: typo. Edit 2: I’d keep a chromium-based Browser of some sort, you might need it sometime for something. Just use different Browsers for different things.

      • SoulKaribou@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        A bit off topic here, but can I ask which digital store you’d recommend for buying music pls ? I know some of them only give back like 3% of the price to the artist. I wouldnt mind paying extra if it serves the artist. I’m interested in metal music of all kinds, if that’s relevant.

        • fairchild@sopuli.xyz
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          3 months ago

          Bandcamp. You always have the opportunity to pay as much as you wish as long as the minimum amount is covered, some even offer free Downloads. It might be a question of time however how long Bandcamp will stay this way as it was bought a while back. It’s also a good place to get releases that you might not be able to find locally, for instance some lables in other regions.

          It might be difficult to find some smaller Bands however, as it takes a while and a bit of sucess until Bands make the jump from just playing live to uploading Music to Streaming Services. I’d recommend looking for Labels first and dig through other people’s collections on Bandcamp.

          I guess in Metal circles attending Concerts and Festivals are still very much the way to go, as many people still appreciate not only Live events but also buying Vinyls or Merch even to support Bands or as Memorabilia. Many Festivals focus on the local Music scene, you can often support them by buying Merch as well, and they are great for networking as (at least in Europe) many organization teams are in contact with each other. You should also keep your eyes open for Vinyl stores, it’s a great way to get in contact with other metalheads or discovering new Music.

          I hope that helps :)

          Edit: You probably know most of what I said anyway so I hope it doesnt come across in a weird way, I just wanted to express my take on it. Maybe consider getting a high-quality Record player if you feel like going down that road :)

    • Lemongrab@lemmy.one
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      3 months ago

      Webcord is another good client. It is more so designed for security and isolation, but supports theming and plugins. Vencord (more specifically Vesktop) is probably a more interesting client.

  • over_clox@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Isn’t it just wonderful how M$ can just screw you without your consent? To hell with Windows!

    Welcome fellow penguin 🐧

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Not to excuse MS crap, but you consented by not managing the system during setup. If you accept defaults, you’re consenting to what someone else thinks about how your system runs.

      I’ve never once had Windows do updates behind my back, because I configure the update system as part of setup. At work, we manage the updates for all systems.

      • over_clox@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        As true as that may be, what’s the deal with all the times I’ve read stories of people setting up and configuring everything the way they want, and then after installing whatever particular updates manually, then MS reverts a bunch of settings back the way they want?

        I dunno, but when I got my HP laptop that shipped with Windows 10, I got to an initial setup screen that asked me something like what’s my mother’s middle name or maiden name or something like that, for sake of password recovery I believe.

        Even though I’m sure I could have entered in any random nonsense that I’d remember, I was like what effing business is it of the OS to ask such private details?

        I didn’t even finish the setup and first boot, I shut it down right then and formatted and installer Linux Mint MATE 20, and I couldn’t be happier.

  • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    If you dislike telemetry,

    Audacity => Tenacity

    Firefox => LibreWolf or FireDragon (GraudaLinux default, good in telemetry respects IIRC)

    You may like btop, Mission Control,

    Avoid any terminals and editors that advertise as “AI” – there were some big ones recently but the community thankfully overall was like nah.

    Get some decent browser extensions, ublockorigin, privacy badger, libredirect

    some people like to pihole their network, opensense/pfsense/ddwrt router is nice to have

    AVAHI broadcasts your services on the LAN IIRC.

    Obviously vscode has telemetry, if you use that try vscodium IIRC, personally I use neither but that’s just me.

    • prousername@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 months ago

      I do obviously know that avahi is bloat, but it’s a dependency of PulseAudio, preventing me from removing it

      • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        I’m pretty sure my Arches with PipeWire audio don’t have it if that’s of any use to you.

        I have used PulseAudio and PipeWire for years and the last few years have preffered the latter when installing all the optional dependencies.

        Then again if it ain’t broke 🤷‍♂️

  • utopiah@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I forgot the exact number but while installing Debian (Bookworm and Sid) this weekend I was shocked by how small the base install, with a window manager (“big” one by your standards, i.e KDE), was. Maybe 2Gb, definitely less than 4Gb. It all worked fine, I could browse the Web, print, edit rich text, watch video, etc.

    I installed a ton more stuff since, e.g Steam, Inkscape, Python libraries for computer vision, etc and it’s still not even 10Gb.

    So… my suggestion is the same as I shared earlier in https://lemmy.ml/post/20673461/13899831 namely do NOT install preemptively! Assuming you have a fast and stable connection I would argue stick to the bare minimum and all add as you need.

    In fact… if you want to be minimalist I would suggest to do another fresh install (it’s fast, less than 1hr and you can do something else at the same time) and stick to the bare minimum right away.

    TL;DR: don’t get rid of, just avoid adding from the first place.

  • andylicious1337@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I would love to do the same (although not the hardcore step with arch :D) but how would I game and also isn’t the support for drivers sometimes really iffy?

    • dave881@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Not a big gamer, myself, but it seems like Valve has done a lot of work to make many (most?) Steam games run well under Linux.

      Drivers have come a long way, and a lot of things just work, but it can definitely depend on what hardware is in your system.

    • J4g2F@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      For getting a idea of how your games run check out protondb.com you can add your steam library to easily check your library.

      For epic, gog and Amazon prime gaming you got heroic (https://heroicgameslauncher.com/) it also uses proton to play windows games.

      GPU drivers are fine. AMD just works for gaming and Nvidia (depending on distro you need to install the drivers, search how to install them and dont install them from the Nvidia website) works fine if you just have a simple setup. The Nvidia drivers are improving alot by the way.

      Random mouse, keyboard and other stuff is a hot or miss. Most of the time basic stuff simply works, but maybe there are no drivers/programma to set rgb or macros. (P.s. Try open rgb for rgb stuff)

      You can always try with a dual boot. If you not used to Linux and like gaming maybe something like pop os

    • yonder@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      As you’ve probably heard, it’s basically just NVidia with shitty drivers. They are getting better but are not included in many distros (they can usually be added through the package manager pretty easily) since they are proprietary. Intel and AMD generally work out of the box for gaming. NVidia drivers are bad enough that I sold my 2060 for an ARC a750 just because of the drivers lol.

    • Lemongrab@lemmy.one
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      3 months ago

      Bluefin (MacOS look) or Aurora (Windows look) are great starter Linux distros. It won’t give you the typical Linux experience (mostly that you won’t really need to do much terminal stuff).

      If you won’t a more typical Linux experience, I recommend Fedora Workstation (the KDE spin if you want that Windows look).

    • june (she/her)@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      I’m still newish to gaming on Linux but from what I’ve heard Nvidia drivers are hit or miss but much better then they used to be. AMD graphics are well supported and using a mix of Proton though Steam and Wine I haven’t really had any issues with games. I have an ROG Ally running Bazzite and a gaming PC running Vanilla OS 2, both do just fine. Additionally hosting game servers on my Debian server has been fine as well.

      If you’re on the fence I’d recommend installing on a separate drive and giving it a try.

    • ftbd@feddit.org
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      3 months ago

      Just install and try to resolve all your issues (if any) in a dualboot. That way you can always go back to Windows if something doesn’t work. But if your experience is anything like mine, you’ll find that 99% works either out of the box or after some minimal configuration. The only notable exception for me are online games that insist on intrusive anti-cheat software (e.g. BattleEye) and choose not to support Proton/Wine on Linux. Curse you, Escape from Tarkov!

  • Ilandar@aussie.zone
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    3 months ago

    It’s quite funny that updates, in theory, are about making something better yet Windows updates are one of the most consistently cited reasons for people abandoning the OS.

  • electricprism@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    It may be a little too late but if you have a chance to use a feature like btrfs snapshots (+time shift) it can be a game changer.

    Any time you need to do something risky to the OS you can just snapshot before like installing 1000 packages, or Nvidia driver update, you can just revert to the old working version by swapping the names on the snapshot and is subvolume.

  • Lemongrab@lemmy.one
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    3 months ago

    Try to still all your desktop apps through Flatpak. Flatpak applications are sandboxes (meaning they are regulated by the system using permission toggles and variables). It is better for security/privacy, and makes transferring app data to a new OS install easy (app data is stored in ~/.var/app/ )

    • prousername@lemmy.mlOP
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      3 months ago

      Flatpak sucks in my opinion. What if i need to install something that is not on flatpak? The AUR exists too.

      • Lemongrab@lemmy.one
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        3 months ago

        Application sandboxing is just SO important. If the app isnt available as Flatpak, you could install it normally and use Bubblejail to restrict it.

        What specifically don’t you like about it?

        • prousername@lemmy.mlOP
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          3 months ago

          Takes long to install software, slow, requires reboot after install. That’s too much effort for me to handle.

          • Lemongrab@lemmy.one
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            3 months ago

            Flatpak shouldn’t require a reboot after install. I never have needed on any distro. It takes me about the same time as regular package manager. Odd to say the least.

  • qocu [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    3 months ago

    All proprietary software.
    And, in case you install open source software, look at who is behind the project. I wouldn’t want to install open source software sponsored by Microsoft, for example.