…If I say ‘well I can travel 1,000 miles on a tank of gas in my car, so your car that can’t go 50 miles must have a problem.’ The logical response is not ‘well that’s a different car altogether, try driving my car and you won’t go 50 miles before refilling.’
Yes, it’s a different OS performing the same action; capable of performing all of the same actions entirely, while doing so much more efficiently. That was the point I was making. Windows is so incredibly shit at everything it attempts to do (and has been since windows 8) that a bunch of freelancers and essentially hobbyists are capable of doing everything windows does, but better, and for free. Just a reminder a windows 11 license costs $139 USD for the home edition. It’s $179 USD for the pro edition.
For a worse product than you can get for free.
altkey@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 weeks ago
Win10 on 8GB is okay in a context of basic office work. It won’t be super fast, but it can handle a CRM app, a browser and a couple of tables/docs alright without outright lagging on input. Dying HDD or pathetic CPU may be worse bottlenecks for really old or cheap setups you can find in, like, public libraries or schools.
16GB is where the current sweet spot at. You can do the same, but generally stop caring how many windows or tabs you open. You can game with it and even do some simple media manipulation.
32GB is a future-proof amount for regular usage in various applications, and, unless you already know what you are doing with extra heavy tasks, you would hardly reach this ceiling.