TL;DR:

The Windows File Explorer is now dependent on Microsoft Recall being installed on Windows 11 24H2 editions and likely later.

This means that if you wish to use newer versions of the Window file explorer, you have to install recall on your system. Recall is a deeply-rooted, non-negotiable feature on all modern versions of Windows.

Solution

If you wish to strip out recall from your system, you are no longer able to use the built-in graphical file explorer and must use a third-party tool, and if you’re not allowed to do that on the machine, then you are forced to have recall running on the system as it doesn’t appear on any graphical settings pages.

The other solution is to prepare for transitioning into a free operating system such as GNU/Linux with distributions such as Linux Mint which is designed specifically for that transition. You can also run an older version of Windows and refuse to update.

Errata

Turns out that this issue has been exaggerated and that there are ways to disable co-pilot on Windows machines (or at the very least, command Windows to do so). Also it’s debatable whether this program does any harm on non “copilot” computers but you can be the judge of that.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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      7 days ago

      I actually got a linux box up and running bc windows has finally forced my hand. I am not thrilled linux looks like a fucking nightmare. Windows is a pain in the ass to work with but at least it warns me before i format the boot sector.

      • someone [comrade/them, they/them]@hexbear.net
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        I’ve been thinking of doing an effort post on how to make a Windows to Linux transition as painlessly as possible. Are there any topics in particular that you (or anyone reading) specifically want a deep dive into?

        Caveat: I’m not a PC gamer (for financial reasons, not ideological ones) so I can’t help much on the gaming side.

        But I think I can help with the rest. I’ve been using Linux as my main desktop OS for about 25 years now.

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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          Uft. Jesus. I’d have to think about it for a while.

          Does Linux have an equivalent of Windows Powertoys Fancyzones?

          Equivalent to Eartrumpet?

          I mostly use FOSS software anyway, so stuff like Libreoffice, GIMP, OBS, that shouldn’t be much of a problem.

          Idk. I think the biggest issue will be figuring out how to set up my workflow again. I rely heavily on FancyZones to keep my desktop legible. I’m very fond of rainmeter. But I suppose for a lot of it I’ll just have to fuss with it until it feels right.

          Part of my concern is it seems like most things I’d want are doable, but there’s a lot of hoops to jump through. Like I have an Azeron Cyro mouse bc I was concerned about RSI. Works great, most comfortable mouse I’ve ever used, but it sounds like to get it to run on Linux you need to run a windows VM, a macro program, and a couple of other things. In windows I just plug it in and use the keymapping software that comes iwth the mouse.

          • FunkYankkkees [they/them, pup/pup's]@hexbear.net
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            7 days ago

            Sorry for jumping into another thread but I think I can help with some of these

            Does Linux have an equivalent of Windows Powertoys Fancyzones?

            Depending on what you use it for a tiling window manager might replace it, or KDE plasma has similar functionality built in I believe

            Equivalent to Eartrumpet?

            I think Pulse Audio Volume Control does everything Eartrumpet does, it comes default with some distributions or you can install the package pavucontrol

          • adultswim_antifa [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            If I understand what fancyzones is, I think people make plugins for gnome and kde that are like Fancyzones. There’s also entire window managers that are like scriptable fancyzones. I’m talking about tiling window managers like awesomeWM and i3. They’re pretty technical but some people really like them.

        • Grebgreb [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          7 days ago

          Is dual booting worth trying? I’ve seen people claim multiple times that this leads to issues.

          How do you make it look like Windows 7 with the windows xp theme?

          Is there a place to check for software and hardware compatibility?

          • CarbonScored [any]@hexbear.net
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            I’ve dual booted for 8 years now. It’s very handy for me, but it is not without its complications - The main one being Microsoft’s illegal anticompetitive behaviour by making Windows regularly overwrite the boot entries, so I have to force a legacy boot to Linux so it can recreate its own entries.

            The second one being that Microsoft doesn’t abide by its own official NTFS specification, and will mark drives dirty when it shouldn’t, forcing Linux to be careful and mark the drive as read-only unless you force it or boot back and make Microsoft re-unmark it.

            If you want a Windows-y theme, I’d point to Plasma/KDE for your desktop type. Plenty of themes around too.

            Honestly I’ve not had an issue with hardware drivers on Linux for a long time, that issue is largely historical. Except for nvidia graphics cards, which may prove a bit finicky depending on the model. Hardware which is very recent may take a while if they don’t release official linux drivers.

            As for software, obviously just check if your software has a Linux binary, if it does they’re generally all-distro supporting these days.

            A lot of games are Linux native now, but for other Games on Steam with Proton (or the more complex effort of running software in WINE), they have appDBs that list compatibility here: https://appdb.winehq.org/ and here: https://www.protondb.com/

          • asexualchangeling@lemmy.ml
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            7 days ago

            Dual booting is less likely to cause issues if it’s 2 separate drives in my experience. When Windows has to share a drive with Linux, it can cause issues.

          • porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml
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            Lots of people do it without issues, but it can sometimes lead to issues, most likely that a windows update overwrites the bootloader and you get locked out of the Linux partition. It’s worth trying if you’re not sure about it, but you can also just run Linux from an external drive while testing it out, which I might recommend more, although it’ll be slower to start up/run programs.

            Can’t help you with the theme sorry, but I have seen some in the past so I guess it’s possible.

            The website for each distro often has comparability information, the Arch wiki has a huge amount, which more or less applies to other distributions too.

      • adultswim_antifa [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        For me, there was just less friction with games and Windows was just not annoying enough to make the full time jump. But those have both moved against Windows in the past few years.

      • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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        Windows is a pain in the ass to work with but at least it warns me before i format the boot sector.

        Linux (Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian) also warns you no? But in any case, it’s a learning curve just like any other. Stick with it for a couple more months and it’ll go away I promise! Linux only gets better over time.

      • glans [it/its]@hexbear.net
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        If you use one of the commonly-advised main linux distros I really don’t think it is worse than windows overall, it’s just different problems. You are accustomed to all kinds of work arounds in windows but linux will require different work arounds.

        If you deleted your boot sector without realizing it, than you must have been using a disk formatting tool as super user. Certainly windows lets you completely format a disk if you want to?

        When you say it “looks like a nightmare” do you mean it’s ugly or is that an overall assessment?

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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          Certainly windows lets you completely format a disk if you want to?

          It sorta does, but it has a large number of lockouts to prevent anyone from doing that. Taking direct control of a windows PC is more complicated than sudo password and doing so can actually brick the OS and make it unbootable. : p

          it “looks like a nightmare”

          I think I’m going to have a very difficult time learning, remembering, and using all the command line stuff. I was trying to pull drivers for a particular cheap wireless NIC I had lying around and gave up after like six hours of trying to understand how to pull something from git. It’s just not a skill set I have right now. I haven’t really used command line since 1993 on a DOS machine.

          • someone [comrade/them, they/them]@hexbear.net
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            My suggestion is to start with the KDE version of Fedora. It supports a pretty huge amount of hardware, so odds are good that your wireless NIC (and other hardware) are likely to work right out of the box. The installation flashdrive doubles as a live working system that boots off the USB stick, so you could test out your hardware to see if it all works without actually removing Windows yet.

            The KDE settings GUI is good enough that you likely won’t need to worry about commandline stuff for awhile. KDE has a default layout similar to Windows. By default the “start” button is in the bottom left, and like Windows that gives you the shortcuts to settings, programs, folders, etc. Tray in the bottom right. Open programs and pinned programs on the bottom between them.

            The non-KDE versions of Fedora are all the same under the hood, but have very different GUIs on top. The GNOME fans may pillory me but I’ve found it’s a lot easier to teach Windows users how to use KDE than GNOME. KDE is also extremely stable and resource-efficient.

          • glans [it/its]@hexbear.net
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            Something has gone awry if you are using git pulls to get basic wifi. I rarely rarely ever need to do that kind of thing, usually only if I’m fucking around, never for something as essential as networking. I’m curious how you ended up going down that path. Is it a very weird NIC? what distro are you going with?

            I would suggest trying a different distro. Just boot it up from the USB and see if you can find one that works with your wireless and other essentials by default without any wrangling. Some computers are just more compatible with certain distros. The wizards will tell you it’s not true because the linux kernel is the same… but it’s the path of least resistance.

            Whichever of the following you haven’t tried, go for the next in the list: Mint, Fedora, Ubuntu.

            You can use a utility called Ventoy to create a bootable USB with a selection of OSes/distros so you don’t have to reflash all the time or have a zillion USB sticks. I have a couple dozen linuxes + Windows on my ventoy USB. It also lets you have a persistent file storage partition on the same USB which is VERY handy to keep documentation, notes about what you did, etc.

            In terms of remembering, that the way you learn command line stuff is by repetition. The stuff you use, you will eventually recall. Stuff you don’t use, you don’t need to recall. You just look it up when you need it. Like you don’t really need to remember the commands to fix your wifi because ideally you’ll only do it once. (It’s worthwhile to keep a note of what works in a safe place though in case of reinstallation.) And you will probably just be following a guide from online anyway. It’s good to be able to read the commands so you can tell if they are OK to run but you don’t need to make them up from scratch.

            There is a utility called tldr it is on my top 5 things I always, always install right away on a new system. I would never have become comfortable on the command line without it. It is a very abbreviated in-terminal help system that gives a small number (5-10) of clear, useful examples for a given command. Use use it like this: tldr ls which gives you an idea of how to use the ls command. This would be the output. You can always go to man ls for comprehensive information, but you won’t need to very often. Unless you end up liking the command line as I was eventually forced to.

            The other way to remember stuff is also not to remember it but to make use of the shell history. That’s a bit more complicated to explain and how it works by default varies by distro. On most systems you should be able to scroll with the up arrow or possibly page up at the empty prompt. You can also usually start typing and hit [tab] for auto complete. Some obtuse systems have these disabled by default. But there are very sophisticated systems/utilities for managing and navigating the shell history. By which I mean to explain that this is actually how people who live in the command line manage to “remember” things. They don’t remember them… they just have a good way to access all previous commands which serve as mnemonics.

            All this to say don’t get down, it’s a learning curve but it’s doable. I’m not particularly well suited to this kind of thing. Learning it was a real struggle at times but even I manage. You feel like you aren’t getting anywhere but you know more now than you did 24 hours ago.

            • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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              It’s a cheap NIC I had in the box of undifferentiated PC parts. TP Link, idk, archer 600 or something? It’s in the closet now. This is apparently the only nic in the world that isn’t plug and play with Linux, so in accordance with the fundamental principle of the Perversity of the Universe that’s the one that I had.

          • communism@lemmy.ml
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            7 days ago

            I was trying to pull drivers for a particular cheap wireless NIC I had lying around and gave up after like six hours of trying to understand how to pull something from git.

            Is it a git repo on the internet? If so, literally just type

            git clone URL-HERE
            

            e.g. to clone the Linux kernel,

            git clone https://github.com/torvalds/linux.git
            
            • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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              That’s what I was struggling with. Apparently I needed some kind of encryption key to pull from git as they no longer allow you to use your password? I hit that like a brick wall and couldn’t get past it.

              • rtstragedy [fae/faer, she/her]@hexbear.net
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                i think this happens if you try to clone with SSH instead of https, which requires an SSH key to be configured in your github account. Pretty sure I can checkout code using https without even logging in bit its been a couple weeks (I refuse to log into Github)

                When you click the clone or download button or whatever its called in Github make sure HTTPS is selected, probdbly would help

                • sawne128 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  I used to have that same problem, and I think that was with https. Like if you type git clone https://github.com/torvalds/linux.git that’s using https, right?

                  Edit: It was probably with SSH, but damn it, if I type what the tutorial says it should just work.

      • Hexbear2 [any]@hexbear.net
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        Windows is a pain in the ass to work with but at least it warns me before i format the boot sector.

        This really isn’t possible to do accidently with user focused distros. I have been using Linux Mint for about 14 years without issue. I suggest Linux Mint to everyone. One can install steam if you want to game, many games work seamlessly, also emulators, lutris, wine, etc.

        I’ve never ran into an issue I couldn’t solve with google and a few minutes of following a tutorial. Also, Linux Mint has the best back-up tool, called timeshift. You let it create back-ups automatically, or do your own manual back-ups, and no matter what you do, you can easily revert back to that back-up with no consequences–Sometimes, if you really bork up your system, you’d need to boot from the USB drive to run timeshift to fix the computer, but again, very easy to google and execute.

        I suggest downloading linux mint to a USB drive, and then running it from the USB drive for a bit to see what it is like. I prefer the cinammon desktop environment.

        Windows is a pain in the ass to work with but at least it warns me before i format the boot sector.

  • git [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    Another day another YouTuber spreading false info. This behaviour happens if you disable recall before OOBE can run which is where you’re asked to enable Recall e.g if you customise the install ISO.

    You can remove Recall just fine by running Dism /online /Disable-Feature /FeatureName:"Recall" or by unticking it in the “optional features” dialog after OOBE runs, and you’ll still have the new Explorer UI.

    • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      Windows 10 hits end of life next year, so Windows 10 users will become the Windows 7 users of today as software and updates slowly stop coming to them.

      Microsoft could also just… forcibly update your machine. It’s their operating system after all.

      • joaomarrom [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        goddammit, Windows 10 is the first Microsoft OS that I forgot I was using because it just hums along in the background mostly without being a fucking nuisance

        they finally get something right and now they’re scrapping it ugh

        • communism@lemmy.ml
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          goddammit, Windows 10 is the first Microsoft OS that I forgot I was using because it just hums along in the background mostly without being a fucking nuisance

          Genuine question, what makes you say this about W10 but not W7? Windows 10 has plenty of annoying shit that wasn’t in 7. For one thing, 7 never tried to nag me about signing into a microsoft account.

          • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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            I finally got Win10 to stop with the “sign in to windows” BS. Don’t remember how, though.

            I managed to kill Edge two or three times but the OS always seemed to die 2-3 months later so I gave up on it. : p

          • joaomarrom [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            Genuine question, what makes you say this about W10 but not W7?

            Because I don’t remember my experience with W7. Come to think of it, maybe that means it was even less annoying and we’ve been going downhill ever since.

        • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Windows 10 is the first Microsoft OS that I forgot I was using because it just hums along in the background mostly without being a fucking nuisance

          Stockholm syndrome.

          • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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            Would like to remind everyone that Stockholm Syndrome is literally “Women be crazy” because a psychologist who never interviewed the Stockholm bank robbery hostages decided that was the only reason why the hostages were chill with the robbers, who were not trying to kill them, while being pissed off with the government, who literally called one woman and told her it was her duty to die in a police shootout to save the bank or some shit, was that she had fallen in love with her captor due to trauma or something. Like the government almost killed them all a number of times over some money, and they ended up trying to help the robbers with negotiations so the government wouldn’t just kill them all and let god sort it out.

            This essay brought to you by reading wikipedia at 3am for most of my life.

            • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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              If I were to explain it more specifically (sans people are dumb level takes), when something is part of the dominant hegemony (Windows has almost become synonymous with the personal computer, something still connected to a Pax Americana mythos) and people aren’t educated on different options then all people have are anecdotes and personal wisdom. Windows as a brand and as a force in computer technology warps everything around it, not the other way around. That’s why we see so many conflicting opinions on Windows, there’s not a leg for people to stand on and judge their experiences objectively. People’s lives depend on the very thing that’s hurting them.

              Add a huge splash of US hegemony to the mix and you can see how Silicon Valley is the technological Hollywood of the world. Communal efforts to create software for the common good is one of the main ways to combat this because it gives us an external vocabulary outside of the silicon valley ideology that’s taught to us. I only really started to understand how computers work when I delved into free software projects.

              • Frank [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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                I totally agree, Just wanted to point out the origin of “Stockholm Syndrome”. Most folks don’t really know where the term came from, the part about the psychologist trying to explain away the very reasonable behavior of the hostages.

        • CarbonScored [any]@hexbear.net
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          I cannot make my Windows 10 PC not forcibly update, reboot, and close all my shit without saving it. Every fucking month. Sometimes I’ll find a way to disable it, then they’ll push some weird telemetry thing and re-enables it a month later. One time Windows refused to acknowledge my generic drivers without re-enabling updates, so I had to do it to plug in my fucking mouse.

          It’s actually the most annoying piece of shit ‘feature’ I’ve ever suffered on Windows. Neither 7 nor XP did that shit.

      • TroublesomeTalker@feddit.uk
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        They can. But I turned off TPM so they won’t. Top tip for lazy arses like me that don’t want to engage in a protracted battle, just make your laptop not meet requirements.

        • CarbonScored [any]@hexbear.net
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          Isn’t TPM a fake requirement anyway? I’m pretty sure you can just lie that you have a TPM and it’ll update and work fine, so that may not stop them.

          • TroublesomeTalker@feddit.uk
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            I mean. Any requirement is fake given they have set arbitrary limits. But right now no TPM is enough to stop the upgrade, and that’s a useful as I need it to be. I have a couple win 11 boxes, but the 10 is still more reliable for gaming, vr, and not shoving ads down my throat. It can stay on 10 until it’s moved to Linux.

    • space_comrade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      TBH it’s not really that much better or worse than Windows 10, I’m having pretty much the same experience as with Windows 10.

      If they really make this AI shit mandatory I’m switching but apparently it’s misinformation that this cannot be disabled.

      • Grebgreb [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        Does Win11 not introduce anything ridiculous like having two control panels where the newer one is just a straight downgrade and often necessitates using the original one anyway? I would’ve thought it’d be filled to the brim with stuff like that.

        Also on win10 the control panel still forcibly defaults to “small icons” even though on win7 it would remember the last setting selected.

        • space_comrade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          Does Win11 not introduce anything ridiculous like having two control panels where the newer one is just a straight downgrade and often necessitates using the original one anyway?

          Wasn’t it the same in Win 10? Either way you can still use the old menus and the new ones are good enough for basic configuration at least. I dunno overall it just doesn’t feel much different than Win 10 other than superficial things.

  • zongor [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    For those like me who are stuck with win 11 on your work computer be aware that KDE makes windows builds for some of their software like the Dolphin file explorer: https://apps.kde.org/dolphin/

    It’s not officially supported yet and has some issues but I’ve been using it for a few days now and it’s been quite nice

    Some issues I’ve run into are: not being able to open archives into dolphin; issues with not being able to move files to the trash bin (although deleting it works fine)

    Also I’m pretty sure that Recall is deep in the kernel so you might not be able to run the explorer shell at all. Unfortunately there really isn’t a good alternative since litestep has been abandoned :(

  • AstroStelar [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    Recall requires a computer that is compatible with Microsoft’s Copilot chatbot:

    Only a small portion of the most recent laptops are “Copilot+ PCs”.

    This means that for everyone else, this information is irrelevant. It will mostly impact business employess and higher-income dupes. Also…

    “Total Recall” kelly

    • hello_hello [comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      This means that for everyone else, this information is irrelevant.

      True, when Microsoft tells its customers that their computers can’t upgrade to Windows 11 because of “hardware requirements” they were obviously not lying through their teeth, totally not because the margins are higher when people buy new computers (and the bloody yankee mining supply chain can continue at full speed).

      It’s not like x86_64 laptops keep advertising AI capabilities through their new NPU units and thus can do the same thing as ARM snapdragon chips.

      The software is proprietary, what they tell you is what they want and are willing to tell you.

  • Hexbear2 [any]@hexbear.net
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    Linux gang here. I have no idea what you’re talking about, but you make it sound pretty terrible, so glad I don’t have to worry about it.