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10 votes
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Fancy Zones, a tiling window manager from Microsoft
8 votes -
Down the Rabbit Hole: Reverse-engineering the Windows Text Services Framework and discovering major vulnerabilities that have existed for almost 20 years
8 votes -
Microsoft releases source for the version of the Linux kernel used in WSL2
16 votes -
Google Project Zero researcher releases denial-of-service vulnerability in Windows SymCrypt library
9 votes -
Shipping a Linux Kernel with Windows
38 votes -
The new Windows Terminal
22 votes -
Project Zero discovered multiple severe vulnerabilities in VBScript by using their grammar fuzzing engine
5 votes -
24-core CPU and I can’t type an email (part one)
13 votes -
Porting [Death Rally] from DOS to Windows
5 votes -
What are the first things you install on a new computer?
Or phone, or after an OS reinstall, etc. Just got to thinking about it because I did a fresh install of Arch on my chromebook the other day, and I'd be curious what other people's priority...
Or phone, or after an OS reinstall, etc. Just got to thinking about it because I did a fresh install of Arch on my chromebook the other day, and I'd be curious what other people's priority software installs are. For me, after the basics like drivers, it's xfce, Firefox, Transmission, Libreoffice, and VLC on linux. Pretty much the same on Windows, plus a few utilities like 7zip, PuTTY, and notepad++. For Android installs I grab nova launcher, Hangouts Dialer, F-Droid, NewPipe and MoonReader before anything else.
EDIT: Forgot firefox on android, as well as ublock origin on all platforms.
Also not completely sure if this belongs more in ~tech or ~comp.
17 votes -
Doing Windows - A Fascinating Series on the History of Microsoft Windows
5 votes -
Have any of you set up GPU passthrough for a virtual machine?
Right now I dual boot windows 10 and fedora, windows for gaming, fedora for everything else. I'm considering running linux as my only native operating system, and running windows in a virtual...
Right now I dual boot windows 10 and fedora, windows for gaming, fedora for everything else. I'm considering running linux as my only native operating system, and running windows in a virtual machine for gaming. This will be more convenient than restarting my pc every time I want to play a game, and I'll feel better about having windows sandboxed in a VM than running natively on my computer.
To get gaming performance out of a virtual machine, I'm planning to have two gpus. One for linux to use, and one reserved exclusively for the virtual machine.
Have any of you set up a computer like this before? What was your experience like? How was the performance?
16 votes -
Linux Genuine Advantage
9 votes -
What will be the future of desktop interfaces?
I feel that the mobile user interfaces has been developed and changed immensly compared to desktops, when it comes iOS and Android. While Windows has pushed some controversial but interesting...
I feel that the mobile user interfaces has been developed and changed immensly compared to desktops, when it comes iOS and Android. While Windows has pushed some controversial but interesting features, macOS and Linux DEs has been kind of stagnant. Has desktop interfaces reached its peak form? Or is there more developments to come?
10 votes