Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 13:50:48Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 13:13:29ShutUp10++
If this is your level of configuration, you fail. One needs to configure without using softwares
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 15:44:44Surely I do not know everything... Please explain why unicast response should be deactivated!I'm outside currently on a phone so I will, for now, reply only on this here. Check this thread - https://www.reddit.com/r/networking/comments/6mejze/benefit_of_prohibiting_unicast_response_to/ - top comment specifically which explains it efficiently in a couple of words.
QuoteYou also didn't block unicast response which is mandatory to do in (Windows Defender) Firewall (it's "yes" by default). Outbound connections go on block all, allow only necessary stuff.
QuoteI'm really not sure why are you against SU10++
QuoteI mean Microsoft is still uncapable to fix KB5034441 in Windows 10 for 7 months at this point and if you want to manually fix it there's a high probability to brick your whole Win10 installation.
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 13:50:48SU10++ does exactly that though, all at once instead of doing it manually 🤷�♂️ Why would you disable Windows Defender btw? The single most useful thing in Windows (both 10 and 11). With it disabled you have disabled most Windows Defender Firewall (that's the name, yes) settings including added outbound customizations. You also didn't block unicast response which is mandatory to do in (Windows Defender) Firewall (it's "yes" by default). Outbound connections go on block all, allow only necessary stuff. The rest is very good but I'm really not sure why are you against SU10++ when it literally does exactly the same thing except disabling Defender and tinkering around Firewall.Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 13:13:29ShutUp10++
If this is your level of configuration, you fail. One needs to configure without using softwares (other than scripts collecting what otherwise would be done manually). For starters, see
home.snafu.de/jasiek/Windows10Telemetry.html
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 13:50:48Such bugs in Windows are rare but there have been exceptional intentional code changes:They are rare but they happen. I mean Microsoft is still uncapable to fix KB5034441 in Windows 10 for 7 months at this point and if you want to manually fix it there's a high probability to brick your whole Win10 installation.
- during some major updates when Windows changes its appended name, such as 23H2
- the task scheduler's top level tasks tend to be reactivated unasked
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 14:00:11Yes, this article is about Snapdragon Elite and Plus so I'm talking about - the Snapdragon Elite and Plus features 🤔 Recall is coming to ARM chips with 40+ TOPS.Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 13:45:01it can't be turned off at all: www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/copilot-plus-pcs?r=1#faq2
This page describes only one threat of impossible turn-off: "On devices that are not powered by a Snapdragon® X Series processor, installation of a Windows update will be required to run Recall."
Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 13:45:01it can't be turned off at all: www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/copilot-plus-pcs?r=1#faq2
Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 13:13:29ShutUp10++
QuoteIt can be turned off, it can't be removed so it stays there in the OS, thus again - literal definition of a bloat.
QuoteAnd "bug" will happen sooner or later when it will activate itself on its own after a random update,
Quotesimilar to Apple's recent bug of restoring long-deleted photos on iPhones and iPads.
Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 13:13:29Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 13:01:14We need to await whether this can be deactivated by deactivating one or several Windows Services, group policy object settings or GUI settings. So far, nobody could say anything about such, if any, possibilities.It can be turned off, it can't be removed so it stays there in the OS...
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 13:01:14IYO, what bloat remains after your (insufficient?) debloating efforts?The fact that you have to do various kinds of workarounds to use local account on installation ([email protected] still works in 24H2, tried it yesterday) is a forced bloat on its own. There is simply too much to list because everything not needed to operate is a bloat by definition. Tracking users' activities is a bloat; you can use ShutUp10++ and disable everything and W11 will still enable options on another update (literal bloat) so you have to disable them again just for some of them to still stay active (which you can verify with netstat -a and see what's calling where).
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 13:01:14We need to await whether this can be deactivated by deactivating one or several Windows Services, group policy object settings or GUI settings. So far, nobody could say anything about such, if any, possibilities.It can be turned off, it can't be removed so it stays there in the OS, thus again - literal definition of a bloat. And "bug" will happen sooner or later when it will activate itself on its own after a random update, similar to Apple's recent bug of restoring long-deleted photos on iPhones and iPads. "It's just a bug."
Quote from: Hotz on May 22, 2024, 13:11:29Haven't looked up anything else, but these many incompatibilities are exactly the reason why I wouldn't buy a Qualcomm PC now. This surely needs to mature first.Yep, this. Or simply use Linux once the updated kernel is ready (and Qualcomm works on that). Until we see reviews this seems like a perfect Linux chip but far from perfect Windows chip, that alone says more about the OS than the chip though.
Quote from: Neenyah on May 22, 2024, 12:41:42Windows 11 [is] extremely bloated even if you debloat everything down to nothing
QuoteRecall [...] 'AI Explorer,' [...] will be bloated even more like it or not.
Quote from: RobertJasiek on May 22, 2024, 12:12:53This article is about the upcoming Snapdragon SoCs; the X Elite (and Plus) ARM chips work only with Windows 11 (and with Linux) so the fact that older Windows versions aren't much bloated is of not much help in this case here.Quote from: Im not steve on May 22, 2024, 10:28:47windows is a bloated OS.
Not all versions of Windows have bloatware and Index / Windows Search but current consumer versions have some. That does not mean that Windows is bloated but it means that the out-of-box experience is. Spend an hour for settings and the bloatware is gone.
...
Once bloat- and crapwares are tamed, Windows is fast. As fast as XP or Windows 7.
While this is bad for sure, do not misinform people by exaggerating description!