• Xhieron@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This is very upsetting to me–more as a point of principle than in fact–but I appreciate that it doesn’t bother younger generations at all. I just had a small argument with my 11 year old about how not-a-big-deal-who-cares this is, and it basically ended with us agreeing to disagree since it’ll be his problem and his kids’ problem.

    And the problem is normalizing the notion that an OS doesn’t need to include a non-subscription word processor. The entire point of this move is to shift the OS Overton Window in favor of consumers accepting and expecting that features like word processors, spreadsheets, etc., should be installed separately and paid for on a subscription basis despite previous iterations of the same software being feature complete on install and purchased at a set, non-recurring fee.

    WordPad hasn’t been anybody’s first choice for a word processor in years, but it was included with Windows and did the bare minimum for unsophisticated users. Now we’re entering an era in which those users will as a matter of course buy off-the-shelf computers that come pre-installed without WordPad, but rather with a trial of Office Fuck-You-Pay-Me Edition. Those users may well discover that after their first six months with their new computer (that has made Microsoft more money selling their data than they paid for it), they suddenly get a pop-up informing them that their trial is up and MS wants $99.99 to release the documents they’re holding hostage.

    It’s a step backwards for consumers in general, so even for the sophisticated of us who are least likely to be personally affected by this change, there’s definitely cause for alarm.

    • BananaTrifleViolin@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I get where you’re coming from but I think you’re overstating the impact in this day and age. If this had been 1995 it’d be a big deal. Now it’s rediculously easy to install any alternative you like for free.

      Libre Office is an entire free fully features office suite.

      I’m less bothered about removing WordPad than I am about Microsoft advertising and pre-installing it’s products in Windows - they force Edge on people, they push OneDrive and preinstall a preview of Office. That’s the real problem - not losing WordPad.

      At one point Anti-Trust / Anti-monopoly regulators globally punished Microsoft for pushing Internet Explorer to consumers and for a long time in Europe had to offer a choice of Browsers to download on new Windows installs. Now it’s allowed to get away with abusing it’s dominant position to force it’s products on consumers.

      • Talos@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I built a new PC two months ago and it’s the first time I didn’t get Office. Libre Office has everything I need and it’s free.

          • insomniac@sh.itjust.works
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            They don’t. Libre Office is maintained by a non-profit called The Document Foundation. They’re funded entirely by donations. I think they make enough to have some full time employees.

            A lot of open source software is created by individuals or non-profits. The Mozilla foundation makes Firefox, for instance. They make money through donations and also Google pays them a ton of money to be the default search engine.

            There are for profit companies that make or contribute to open source software. Such as Red Hat. They tend to make money by selling support for the software.

          • Talos@lemmy.world
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            I don’t think they make money. It’s an open source project where people donate their time as far as I know.

            EDIT: I forgot to mention you can donate to the project. Something has to pay for web hosting, I guess.

          • LinuxSBC@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            A bit of donations, a bit of unpaid people contributing just to help others.

      • SargTeaPot@lemmy.nz
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        1 year ago

        Or you know, google docs is a thing which is free and imo works better than word

        • MrSpArkle@lemmy.ca
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          A web browser is not a word processor no matter how much they tart it up. If the thing isn’t saving a file to my local drive that is in a common format It’s not worth putting your effort into.

          So many kids are going to grow up not having the concept where data lives and what the failure modes are.

    • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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      I’d like to normalize the notion that an OS shouldn’t include any application software except for a browser you can use to install other things. Let people pick what they want to use and install it themselves.

      • orbitz@lemmy.ca
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        Wasn’t there an anti trust or monopoly suite against Microsoft for bundled IE back in the day? Funny how times change, though I agree it’s not easy to get a preferred browser without one. Mean it never was overly simple but they were on so many CDs mailed out back then. Think it has to do with some IE and Windows integration too so not just cause they bundled it.

        • Nougat@kbin.social
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          The problem with IE4 is that it was designed in such a way that it was deeply integrated into the operating system, such that it could not be uninstalled.

          It’s completely reasonable now to ship an operating system without a browser, as long as there’s some kind of “app store” or “package manager” through which a user can install whatever browser they want (provided it’s available through said store, of course).

      • Programmer Belch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        Better yet, the OS should just include a desktop environment with simple utilities and a package manager to install the applications you want. It will make users less likely to run into malware while searching for the programs in the web

          • Neve8028@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            I mean you can. Most people who interact with computers aren’t that knowledgeable and just want their OS to have usable defaults which is fine.

          • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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            1 year ago

            We’re talking about Windows here, where the desktop environment is too thoroughly intertwined with the rest of the OS to ever remove it. The kind of terminal emulator environment that Linux boots into doesn’t even exist in versions of Windows that have been sold after the early 2000s.

          • Programmer Belch@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 year ago

            I was talking more in the lines of taking away most of the windows bloat. If someone wants to install their own desktop environment they will most likely go down the linux path.

      • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        I think a file manager, text editor and command prompt are pretty essential too. And when you’ve added those, where exactly is the limit where it becomes “application software”?

        • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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          I don’t have an answer for that, but I know Wordpad is definitely not essential and I doubt anyone would use it if it didn’t come with Windows

      • GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think it’s worth separating the two related but distinct concepts of what is a part of the operating system itself (for example, the actual file manager) and what is pre-installed or bundled with the operating system (games like Minesweeper).

        I agree with you that a rich text editor definitely shouldn’t be part of the OS. But should it be a bundled part that ships with the desktop environment, the way Windows/MacOS/Android/iOS/ChromeOS all come with photo library software, basic image editors, media players, browser, email client, etc.? These applications aren’t strictly necessary to use or maintain the system itself, so maybe they shouldn’t have some kind of privileged use of the OS’s functionality, but there’s no harm in bundling in the installation defaults.

        I don’t think a rich text editor is an important enough function to necessarily be preinstalled with the OS, but I can see an argument, at least. There’s a reason why Windows shipped with one since the beginning, and why MacOS and KDE and Gnome each have a default that very few people actually use regularly.

        • Aatube@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          piracy theme intensifies
          Office is one of the easiest things to pirate. It 1. is very popular 2. has an official mass-activation way that can be easily exploited. I suspect we may have a spy in there
          Or, y’know, just use LibreOffice with the tabs setting and contextual groups if you can afford experimental features
          or if you still hate the UI just use WPS instead, who cares that it’s awful and from China you don’t have to pay

          Also, why would you even get Word or PowerPoint on macOS?? Excel I understand but these two??

          • TrustingZebra@lemmy.one
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            why would you even get Word or PowerPoint on macOS?? Excel I understand but these two??

            Main reason would be full compatibility with Office documents.

          • danielton@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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            Also, why would you even get Word or PowerPoint on macOS?? Excel I understand but these two??

            Because Word and Powerpoint are what they know.

          • anon_water@lemmy.ml
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            Let me clarify what I meant. I am saying that we pay for the OS which includes applications on both Mac and Windows. Only Mac gives us a free suite of office applications.

      • johnthedoe@lemmy.ml
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        The cost of the full Mac apps and OS is in the cost of the hardware. At least it’s one upfront cost. Surely the way windows is going can’t be popular or sustainable.

    • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Tbh I use Notepad way more than anything for note making.
      If it needs to be formatted, OneNote is free to use and can be saved in any cloud (if there is a shortcut like OneDrive or Dropbox in the Windows explorer)
      If it needs to be free and not very sophisticated, I’d look around for a markdown based editor.

      If all of that fails, I will use Word.
      Never used Wordpad in 15 years (of 24 years of existence) except while trying to open word but Windows suggesting Wordpad first.

      • ares35@kbin.social
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        i use wordpad a lot for viewing docs (loads faster, uncluttered ui). occasionally writing them… and more than once instead of notepad for a text file (on a system without a notepad alternative available) because i needed more features.

        i have a few clients that use wordpad as their ‘word processor’, lack of spelling check be damned.

        microsoft must have run out of excuses for specifically not including one in it, seeing how recent windows has spell check baked-in to the os itself. so instead of losing a few dozen sales of office home and student or 365 by making wordpad just a little bit better for those who use it, they’re gonna be the assholes and take it out completely and push everyone to the damn cloud app or a 365 sub. fk 'em.

        • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          It has it’s uses. Not for me but some are definitely need it. Problem is, how much effort is it to keep it around vs how much is it used realistically.

          Best way forward would be to replace it with a completely different app like Word online but as an actual app lile Word Lite or something like that.

    • Bobby Turkalino@lemmy.yachts
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      Google Docs is free and has basically become the standard word processor for the “unsophisticated users” you’re worried about. It essentially comes with your OS because you only need a browser to use it.

      I think your kid and his children will survive.

      • angstylittlecatboy@reddthat.com
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        Making things in Google Docs is fine, but last I checked Google Docs just sucked at opening anything that wasn’t already a GDoc. LibreOffice Writer sometimes has formatting errors opening Word Docs, but it does a miles better job than Google Docs.

        Also, I hate how normalized everything using the cloud (aka “Someone Else’s Hard Drive”) for no reason is.

        • Muehe@lemmy.ml
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          Well to be fair to Google (urgh, that hurt to write) that’s by design, and LO doing so well at it is due to investing a lot of engineering time on it. Basically MS released an open standard for office documents, but refuses to use this open standard themselves, and instead keeps using an ever evolving “transitional” version of their standard that isn’t made public.

      • Hello Hotel@lemmy.world
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        it still has strings attached, its not truly “free”. heck, google won’t let it be word pad had no ties to Microsoft once it was given to you. everything else but LibreOffice and some others still have its creator’s ties.

    • ebits21@lemmy.ca
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      It’s too bad Linux isn’t more normalized. For those very simple users (and for the more sophisticated) Linux is probably much better than Windows at this point.

      No ads, free software, updates can be very simple and stable, less security issues.

    • JJROKCZ@lemmy.world
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      Then they ask their grandson or work it dept what they should do and both will answer libre office is free

    • kescusay@lemmy.world
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      Likely scenario, honestly.
      I really don’t worry about it, though.
      Not to brag, but it doesn’t bother me.
      Understand, there is a solution.
      X marks the spot.

      (Yeah, I know, that’s kind of stupid. But it seemed funny in my head.)

      • Emerald@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I can’t read you

        I’ve given everything, but you seem distant

        I can’t feel you

        Your heart is somewhere else, it’s missin’

        What if I read back to you?

        You have a piece, but there’s two

        Someone please get this reference.

    • funchords@lemmy.sdf.org
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      This is very upsetting to me–more as a point of principle than in fact–but I appreciate that it doesn’t bother younger generations at all.

      I am in a support group with over 100 senior citizens in it. Getting a file with a *.rtf extension used to be a thing, but it hasn’t been a thing in years. I do get *.doc and *.docx files so they’re probably getting lured into Office like you said even before Wordpad is removed.

    • Wooki@lemmy.world
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      Why in gods name don’t you use libre office. It’s so much better than word and excel for rent

    • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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      I used it for my damn resume because I didn’t have word, didn’t need office. I also liked it because when friends asked me to review a document I could open word documents with it, I would do that sometimes even when I had office because WordPad opened faster and I didn’t need perfect formatting.

      I think it is safe to say that your 11 year old is factually wrong lol. But it is okay that they don’t understand how bad this is because the concept of how multiple businesses have switched to subscription based models even in places we wouldn’t expect, like a monthly subscription allowing already installed hardware in your car to actually function, cause it’s just 11 year Olds don’t have a great concept of bills and money at that level yet. I say wait for their first complaint of it as an adult and then put on your carefully choreographed and practiced “I told you so” dance

      Okay kidding aside I think it is absolutely wonderful this is something you didn’t just have a conversation with your young kid about but that you had to agree to disagree, you sound like a fantastic parent who actually fosters a relationship with their kid. And probably only rarely says I told you so.

  • AndreTelevise@lemm.ee
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    WordPad was a fast and efficient way to view doc files without loading into LibreOffice or any other office suite, or to make rich text documents quickly. But alas, we have to go to the cloud for our notes now…

  • angstylittlecatboy@reddthat.com
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    I mean, I use LibreOffice, but for people not that tech savvy it sucks they won’t have a basic rich text tool included with Windows.

  • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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    Am completely expecting this to be due to falling office sales or fear that people will realize they don’t need expensive Office every few years when WordPad has 90% of functionality for daily use.

    I expect this will make a lot of people very angry since I know many users of WordPad.

      • Classy@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I personally like the look and feel of FreeOffice better. Fairly enough, I haven’t used Libre in many years, but it always felt kind of clunky and when I tried Free it was very comfortable and familiar to use, as a lifetime Word-er.

    • Microw@lemm.ee
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      I dont think I know any person who uses Wordpad. Most probably dont even know that it exists, hidden away somewhere in the starting menu…

    • Banzai51@midwest.social
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      People still sleep on Excel. Nothing else touches it, and your finance department would riot if IT tried any of its “replacements.”

    • Stamets@startrek.website
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      I am one of those users. I use wordpad for prepping my DnD games. MS Office is beyond bloated and slows my pc to a crawl when it’s open. Same with Open Office and LibreOffice if I’m honest. Both hog too many resources.

      Guess I’m moving over to Obsidian full time.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      Wordpad has been obsolete since you could open files bigger than 64KB in Notepad. It’s useful for almost nothing.

      It’s not like your can’t just install LibreOffice or use Google Docs and be done with it.

    • AustralianSimon@lemmy.world
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      They changed their licensing and specifically for robot users so I suspect it’s to funnel those users into licenses which is a lot more than consumers.

  • Vashti@feddit.uk
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    Slightly annoyed about this, as I do use Wordpad (it’s lightweight and useful for quick notes that I want to mark up with bold and italic). I don’t always want to watch Word or Libreoffice load for twenty to thirty seconds.

    Shitty decision, happy to be Wordpad’s one fan.

    • DashboTreeFrog@discuss.online
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      There’s dozens of us!

      Yeah, when I want to just jot some words down quick in Windows, Wordpad has always been my go-to, but main thing for me is opening .txt files. Maybe I’m dumb and there’s some Notepad default layout thing I never bothered figuring out, but I don’t want to have to scroll right to read long lines of text.

      • Vashti@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        Doesn’t have formatting, unless Notepad has got really adventurous at some point in the last decade or two.

        • Malfeasant@lemm.ee
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          I recently noticed notepad now displays line numbers, so there has been some improvement… But it still shits the bed if you try to open a file that’s more than a few megs…

          • Vashti@feddit.uk
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            I mean, I’d never use Notepad. Download Notepad++, it’s better in literally every way.

            • Malfeasant@lemm.ee
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              Oh yes, I use notepad++ regularly. I opened something with notepad by accident the other day and happened to notice the change.

    • PancakeLegend@mander.xyz
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      Same boat. I have been using WordPad and .rtf format for all my notes for maybe 15 years.

      I’ve been meaning to jump to a markdown editor for a long time, and after this news I’ve already started using MarkText. I probably should have jumped ship a long time ago, but at least I’m on the path now.

      I will have to figure out a neat way to convert my .rtf notes to .md. Update: I’ve found Pandoc, it’s a command line tool for which I’ve made a script for converting my .rtf files to .md.

      • 31337@sh.itjust.works
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        I’ve been using Joplin for a few years, syncing through Dropbox, and I like it. Mostly through the Linux terminal UI + vim though.

    • eee@lemm.ee
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      Yeah it’s really strange. I’m not a fan of MS by any means, but I’ve found myself making so many pro-MS comments on Lemmy just because the userbase leans so heavily pro-Linux and anti-MS.

      • dantheclamman@lemmy.worldOP
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        Lemmy and other Fediverse sites tend to attract folks who prefer FOSS. Early Reddit was that way too!

      • visak@lemmy.world
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        And then getting downvoted by people who just disagree with your opinion. I’m one of the Reddit refugees so I don’t know if we brought that with us or Lemmy was like that before but it’s sad to see.

      • ebits21@lemmy.ca
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        It shouldn’t be that strange. Linux nerds are a huge Lemmy demographic.

        Much more up on new technology, FOSS, and privacy issues etc. than the general population. Good fit for Lemmy.

      • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Thank you for the link to embrace, extend, extinguish. You really can’t point it out enough because it’s become the de facto business plan for so many tech companies.

        As for myself, after 30 years on MS starting with DOS and fifteen on Mac (concurrent, lol), I’m finally exploring Linux with the end goal of getting off both in terms of desktop computing. I am absolutely convinced MS is trying to head toward an OS subscription model if there’s any possible way they can get away with it, and I want to get off any dependency on their products before they do. Apple hasn’t been nearly as bad for me personally, but as long as I’m moving in a FOSS direction I might as well do those too. Plus, Linux is so light you can run it on truly old hardware, like the 13 year old Macbook with 4 GB of RAM I’m using as a test box.

        Cool thing is that Linux believes in live trials, so you download your distro for free, load it up on a thumb drive, and spin it around without installing a thing until you want to, doing this as many times as you like without cost. And the experience is unbelievably full and fast on the most minimal hardware imaginable.

        I haven’t decided on a distro yet, still testing them out, but I’m honestly starting to wonder why I waited so long to start exploring the alternatives, because they’re appealing as hell, much more so than yet another disappointing ad-filled Windows release.

        • tabular@lemmy.world
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          What has changed which means they should be forgiven or trusted during these 20 years? What does a Linux subsystem for Windows prove? They want users to run Linux apps in Windows so their users will be less tempted to not use Windows… so they can add more anti features for profit.

          • bemenaker@lemmy.world
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            I guess you are completely unaware of the fact that a huge chunk of the Azure infrastructure runs on linux now. MS also knows that in the enterprise space, companies use linux in their server infrastructure also, so their employees need to be able to work in linx as well. MS has versions of SQL and I believe also exchange that run on linux. WSL isn’t just about appease neckbeard wannabes.

    • sab@lemmy.world
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      Not to mention the amount of people who think this is about notepad.

    • ebits21@lemmy.ca
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      I mean, not many people are in the loving Microsoft camp. Tolerate maybe.

    • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      A broken clock can be right twice a day. Unless someone keeps playing with the dials.

      As a former user, and an hardcore fanboy, I loved MS and Windows. They made computers accessible for the general public. The OS and the office suite were great. The sheer amount of available software for it was phenomenal. They even decided to publish games, which meant quality!

      Until they decided to break things.

      XP was a great OS, Vista wasn’t. Then 7 was back to being good just for 8 to be not as good. Then Cortana and Edge and the push for cloud computing.

      What worked, worked well and was actually useful was changed, removed, phased out…

      GNU/Linux is not without its dramas and difficulties but we can expect a good degree of continuity between each version of a software (I’m looking a you, Gnome!). And if we’re that hell bent on having that specific specific piece of software or OS setup, well, we can.

      MS by contrast just chucks the good things out and doesn’t even let them floating around as something users may add to their system.

      Does someone remembers the PowerToys collection?

      • Bytestream@programming.dev
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        Unpopular opinion: Vista was actually a good step forward, but the hardware of the time wasn’t up for the task which made it run like dogshit, and hence the public perception. It brought in better memory management, and UAC for better security among other things.

        What worked, worked well and was actually useful was changed, removed, phased out…

        MS by contrast just chucks the good things out and doesn’t even let them floating around as something users may add to their system. Cortana, widely hated and unused, was phased out for one… wordpad being gone is so insignificant, it wasn’t even very good at its primary task.

        They often replace things, e.g. the Photos app had a Video editor built in but now that’s a separate and better app. I think they’re doing a pretty good job of their software range actually.

        What bugs me about Windows is actually their striving so much for backwards compatibility that there’s at least 6 ways to edit things or data and they’re all still officially supported. It’s a bit bloaty and no Devs have any consensus.

        Does someone remembers the PowerToys collection?

        The newer version is installed on my Windows 11 and is under active development.

        • bemenaker@lemmy.world
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          Vista was a good idea and good start, but 7 was the finished product that needed shipped. Just like XP was the finished version of 2000, though 2000 wasn’t bad, but XP was just better, more optimized, and yes hardware caught up also. 98, was 95 but better, fixed and polished. 10 was windows 8 better, fixed and polished, and they dumped that stupid fucking tablet interface that everyone hated, (and whoever put that interface in server 2012 needs to be beaten with a sand filled wiffle ball bat)

          Backwards compatibility is why windows dominates the market. Without that, it wouldn’t have taken over the business world. Legacy code is what makes the business world operate. Yes it hold back windows for some growth, but deprecating that would wreck so many businesses, especially small ones.

      • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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        Does someone remembers the PowerToys collection?

        That name rings a bell. My username is from “Tweak Tools 95”, which I think was a part of that or something.

        Edit: Also Windows has a long history of alternating good and bad versions.

        • 98 - good
        • ME - bad
        • XP - good
        • Vista - bad
        • 7 - good
        • 8 - bad
        • 10 - good
        • 11 - bad

        In theory, the next version of Windows should be fairly good, or at least an improvement on 11. However I worry that MS will buck the trend now - particularly as they’ve pivoted away from software sales to software as a service (with additional data collection because fuck paying users).

        • rippersnapper@lemm.ee
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          Unpopular opinion: Win 11 works well for me, and is visually better than Win 10. Although it’s a fairly recent PC. Although if they keep pushing more telemetry and ads, I’m moving over to Ubuntu.

          • mob@lemmy.world
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            Its the small things on Windows 11 for me. Like the “more options” section on the right click… that must have been added just to annoy people. It’s where all the good options are.

            Otherwise, seems to run fine.

          • fulano@lemmy.eco.br
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            As someone from a developing country, windows 11 contributes to higher digital inequality because of its unnecessary high hardware requirements. If they don’t support windows 10 for a long time, we will suffer a great toll.

            And unfortunately, people around here barely use linux and developed quite a repulsion for it, which only makes things worse for ourselves…

            It’s hard not to hate microsoft when we live on the ugly side of capitalism.

          • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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            2000 was mostly NT and business stuff (which later became XP), and 8.1 by definition isn’t really a new version.

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      I would have never thought so many people would be pissed about Wordpad. Fucking Wordpad! It’s terrible! And Ms isn’t killing it to get office subscriptions because no one fucking uses it! They’re killing it because it isn’t worth the effort to maintain. There are so many free alternatives that are better.

    • schzztl@lemmy.nz
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      I can count on one hand the amount of MS products I’ve vaguely enjoyed using. Most things seems to be designed with the attitude that people will be using this whether they like it or not, making the user experience fucking awful. Nothing wrong with shitting on them.

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    I get that people here hate MS, but defending Wordpad is a bonkers hill to die on.

    It’s complete wank.

    • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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      It’s the free (as in beer) program that comes with windows to open doc and rtf files and put together fine enough documents. Dropping it is Microsoft telling users unwilling to pay for word without the technical knowhow to get LibreOffice or Abiword going to get fucked. Its anti consumer no matter which way you slice it.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        It’s have to actually launch it to be sure, but I’m pretty sure you can open them in Edge these days, along with all the other office documents.

        As for creating documents, your average social media comment editor has more features than Wordpad. Given that Chrome is still the most popular browser on Windows by some way, I think the average Windows user can download programs just fine. OpenOffice is even on the MS Store for those stuck on Windows S edition.

    • heimchen@discuss.tchncs.de
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      My basic text editor on Winows somehow broke and crashes with a wired memory error so I WordPad is my basic text editor

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      Notepad is, in fact, under active development. They recently upgraded find and replace so it works 90% of the time instead of 30% and added some annoying restore session by default feature. not to mention tabs

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        I’d never had an issue with find and replace, but then I tend to install notepad++ straight away.

      • MrSpArkle@lemmy.ca
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        I interviewed at Microsoft decades ago and found a bug in notepad during my interview when they gave me a laptop and asked me how I would test notepad.

        Their faces indicated that this was not supposed to be a productive exercise.

    • btaf45@lemmy.world
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      it will deprecate WordPad with a future Windows update as it’s no longer under active development

      It doesn’t need “active development” because it is perfect the way it is. Unix/Linux has tons of useful programs that haven’t been in active development for 40-50 years.

    • viking@infosec.pub
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      Notepad is just a barebones text editor. I doubt there were any substantial changes since Windows 95, other than ensuring it runs on a 32 and later 64 bit infrastructure, and the menu works with newer releases. That sounds like a 1h per quarter job at most.

    • decadentrebel@lemmy.world
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      I haven’t been using Wordpad for 20+ years. Notepad could do everything it does already. Then, you also have Firefox’s built-in inspect to tinker with code on the fly.

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    Honestly, this blows. WordPad fills a niche between a full blown text editor and notepad. Most of my random daily notes use WordPad still when not OneNote.

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    So long as they don’t fuck with Notepad, I could give a fuck. Notwithstanding Notepad++ is a thing, so the fuck to be given would be inordinately small.

    • Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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      Yeah where else would I open a ton of ascii art, followed by “Install, then copy crack to install folder” 😂

  • AdmiralShat@programming.dev
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    I used WordPad so much growing up. I fucking HATED Word and the office applications as a kid, WordPad just worked and just did writing, which is what I wanted to do.

      • Franzia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Clipart and wordart :3

        All text breaks if I insert an image!

        constantly reverting to the default font instead of the one I’ve used for the entirety of the document

        no visual aid settings, the absolute literal WYSIWYG.

        • cubedsteaks@lemmy.today
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          I’m sad that clipart and wordart are fading into obscurity but at least there is enough nostalgia for it that it isn’t forgotten.