Can you elaborate on how it’s cleaner?
Comment on Windows 10 IoT LTSC 2021...'has reached end of support' warning (?!)
Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world 1 day agoIf your pirating which for end users is the only way to get LTSC, just run Windows Server.
It’s cleaner than LTSC.
pastermil@sh.itjust.works 23 hours ago
Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
xbox gamebar isn’t preinstalled. Onedrive backup and bing search bar isn’t preinstalled.
pastermil@sh.itjust.works 12 hours ago
Didn’t know they were present on the latest IoT LTSC
11111one11111@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Not disagreeing but this isnt a form of pirating. They didnt break shit, they didnt hack shit and they didnt exploit shit. Microsoft built their entire DRM software in a way that was able to be recerse engineered.
Again, not contradicting anything you recommended. I just wanted to point this out because I cant encourage this option enough for anyone forced into putting up with Windows. You are actually uaing the same activation codes that microsoft themselves generate and distribute to their customers.
I can confirm it works for Windows 10, 11, for any iteration of 23h or 24h, all Office applications, both individually and packaged, visual studio, and I wanna say Adobe but that one im not 100% on.
AnyOldName3@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Circumventing DRM by any means, whether that’s by modifying it so it doesn’t work or just clicking buttons that the DRM provider doesn’t want you to click, is legally considered piracy in most of the world. If you didn’t get the activation code from Microsoft (or someone Microsoft authorised to give it to you), it’s pirated.
11111one11111@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Id disagree. Its not my responsibility to close all their doors that are accessible to the public. Microsoft provided all the tools to use their software without their involvement. As a US citizen, I’m liable for my own negligence and/or ignorance. Corporations are pegally protected under corporate personhood so the same liabilities affect them too.
AnyOldName3@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Legally, it isn’t. The DMCA (and compatible laws in non-US countries, which those countries have to have or they’re not allowed a trade deal, and not having a trade deal with the US is devastating for an economy) doesn’t require copyright holders to do anything to defend their copyright. It does make it illegal to do (nearly) anything with copyrighted media that you don’t have explicit permission to do from the copyright holder (there are some exceptions, but people generally think they go further than they really do). It also makes it illegal to do (nearly) anything to circumvent DRM, even if you have a legal right to use the thing that the DRM is protecting, no matter how crappy the DRM is and how easily it can be bypassed.
You’re allowed to think that the law is stupid (it’s the DMCA - everyone who looks at it and isn’t a multibillion dollar publishing company thinks it’s stupid), but that doesn’t mean that it’s not the law, and for legal terms like piracy, you can’t just substitute your own definition based on what should be legal if it conflicts with the definition that says what really is legal.
The reason why non-crap DRM exists when there’s no legal reason to make it not crap is the same reason why DRM exists at all when there’s no legal reason to have DRM at all when piracy of DRM-free stuff is already a crime. It’s that publishers think that the more of a hassle it is to pirate things, the more likely people are to buy things legally. Technically, a shareholder could sue a company for using crap DRM that failed to protect their IP, but the company has a decent defence by saying that they felt that intrusive DRM would hurt their reputation with legitimate customers, so not using strong DRM is not grounds to say a company’s been negligent and liable for any losses they make due to piracy.
Passerby6497@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Its not my responsibility to close all their doors that are accessible to the public.
It’s not your responsibility to close the doors, but it is your responsibility not to walk in an open door and take something that’s not yours
As a US citizen, I’m liable for my own negligence and/or ignorance.
Yep, and that negligence/ignorance you’re liable for in this case is piracy.
You’re welcome to disagree with a bad law (and make no mistake, I absolutely think it’s a bad law), but you’re still liable for breaking laws you don’t agree with. By all means break it, but don’t pretend you’re not breaking it, and make sure you take reasonable precautions to keep yourself safe while doing so.
Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world 23 hours ago
Microsoft built their entire DRM software in a way that was able to be recerse engineered.
Downloading movies you haven’t paid for is also piracy even if there’s no drm. Microsoft doesn’t need to put any copy protection for it still to be piracy.
Piracy has nothing to do with copy protection.
And it’s beside the point. Using LTSC that you didn’t paid for is the same as using Windows Server that you didn’t pay for. So why not use Server which is better than LTSC?
kylian0087@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 hours ago
No, dont run server. Many programs will not allow to be installed on it without getting enterprise versions of the software. Also gaming on it can have many limitations.
Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
I run server and have never seen that. Could you give an example?
There are no limitations. The scheduler doesn’t prioritize foreground tasks over background tasks. In my experience that makes it smoother. If you want it to multitask like desktop, it’s a registry setting.