• bassgirl09@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The 24H2 update would not install on a brand new prebuilt PC that I bought for my parents. I contacted both the manufacturer and Microsoft and spent too many hours troubleshooting before I gave up and returned it to where I bought it as defective. Back to the drawing board for a replacement PC for my parents.

  • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Can’t they just offer access to your data back at a discounted rate compared to what they charge their data partners for it?

    • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      It looks like finally after almost ten years they will complete the dark mode on windows. But some buttons will still be with the light theme, they ran out of ai credits and need to wait for next month to replenish the free tier

    • MonkderVierte@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      I think it has more to do with the new atomic update and their now-usual not-testing aproach.

    • PlexSheep@infosec.pub
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      4 months ago

      Didn’t they proudly say how much of windows is AI generated slop code a few months ago?

    • RiceBowl@discuss.tchncs.de
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      4 months ago

      I love my 13". Does exactly what I need. I kind of want the 12", but I don’t really need it. So i’m going to hold off.

  • Lena@gregtech.eu
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    4 months ago

    of file corruption when symptoms occurs" adds the report (Translated from Japanese by Grok AI).

    Why would you use an LLM to translate text? There are tools made specifically for that

    • ssillyssadass@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Honestly, translations are one of the few things LLMs are good for. It can catch things like idioms or other things a machine translator may mistranslate. Though tbf, the main appeal is still live translation.

  • zer0bitz@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Yesterday I got into the process of installing Windows 10 onto my laptop because I am selling it tomorrow. I asked the buyer if he wanted it with an OS or not, and he replied that he wanted Windows 10 Pro. I downloaded the ISO and installed it to one of my M.2 SATA SSD drives with a USB adapter.

    Before installing Windows over my Linux installation, I did a SecureErase to wipe out my drive with the Linux installation because that is the SSD I am selling with the computer.

    After installing Windows 10 from the M.2 SATA SSD with a USB adapter to the SecureErased drive, I instantly got multiple error messages about SMART checks saying that the SSD was broken/corrupted. I had never seen this POST error message when booting that computer with a Linux installation.

    Well, I obviously had to change the drive to another one where I got the Windows installation to work normally without the BIOS POST error message.

    I really cannot be sure what caused that. Can SecureErase do that so SMART checks report the drive as corrupted? Or was it the Windows installation?

    • Eximius@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      SecureErase would overwrite the whole drive (potentially multiple times). So if the ssd was close to dead, it might have just triggered it.

      • zer0bitz@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I see. Well the SSD was used and few years old. Some Samsung SSD from a OEM build. I did run SMART tests on it like year ago and it was ok/healthy.

        Time to fill it with linux isos and seed them with torrentz until it breaks completely.

        • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 months ago

          Fully overwriting an SSD is so archaic.

          Example from hdparm:

          --trim-sector-range
          For Solid State Drives (SSDs). EXCEPTIONALLY DANGEROUS. DO NOT USE THIS OPTION!! Tells the drive firmware to discard unneeded data sectors, destroying any data that may have been present within them. This makes those sectors available for immediate use by the firmware's garbage collection mechanism, to improve scheduling for wear-leveling of the flash media. This option expects one or more sector range pairs immediately after the option: an LBA starting address, a colon, and a sector count (max 65535), with no intervening spaces. EXCEPTIONALLY DANGER‐ OUS. DO NOT USE THIS OPTION!!

          I think the all caps warnings say it all.
          This is only for the trim sectors of the disk but I can’t imagine it being much different overwriting a whole disk.
          Not to mention, as OP said, an old and very used disk.
          Quick formatting should be enough to prevent any normal user from extracting meaningful data from the flash storage as only the controller knows how to piece together the flash cells to a file.
          If the controller forgets it, the files are toast anyway.
          At best write some random data to a quarter of the disk or something lile that.

          File recovery may only be possible if you give it to a drive recovery facility. But remember: Those ain’t exactly cheap.
          A client paid some 4 figure price because an HDD died. Just for a small amount of files.

          • WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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            4 months ago

            @zer0bitz@lemmy.world did a SecureErase, which is an entirely different function. It was exactly made to be used in this scenario: user is selling their laptop.

            other than that, hdparm --trim-sector-range is most probably only marked dangerous because with a slight miscalculation you can wipe some of your data and you won’t even know how much damage you did. I’m pretty sure the fstrim command relies on this, which is executed every few weeks on my system, by default. check systemctl status fstrim.timer, maybe on yours too.

            Quick formatting should be enough to prevent any normal user from extracting meaningful data from the flash storage as only the controller knows how to piece together the flash cells to a file.

            what do you mean by quick formatting? how do you do that on linux? I have only heard this term with te windows disk management tool.

            on windows quick formatting only deletes the partition entry from the partition table. that’s why it’s quick. all the former data is there and can be easily recovered, given you know the former partition boundaries, which can also be recovered by tools. the ssd controller won’t know a thing, it won’t forget where it should look for each LBA address.

  • Riskable@programming.dev
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    4 months ago

    Linux users: “See what we mean?”

    Windows users: “La la la! I can’t hear you! Losing my data is clearly better than having to learn something new!”

    • chunes@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I have literally never had one of these things happen to me before. I’m pretty sure people just make them up for clicks at this point.

    • 11111one11111@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Linux users: “See what we mean?”

      Windows users: “La la la! I can’t hear you! Losing my data is a standard Windows feature!”

      • Otter@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        Your account seems to be marked as a bot, you can fix that in your user settings if it was unintentional

      • enumerator4829@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago
        $ su -
        # rm -rf —no-preserve-root /
        

        Should do the trick. (Obviously don’t try it unless you know what you are doing and know what may happen when it hits your EFI variables.)

      • LupertEverett@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I love how people immediately downvoted you to hell for this lmfao.

        Like yeah, the guys on the comments: only people use rm -rf, absolutely no scripts use it at all. Something like motherfucking STEAM absolutely didn’t remove people’s data that one time. And hey, their so beloved --no-preserve-root didn’t prevent that from happening. :D

        I love and currently use Linux, but my GOD some Linux people are annoying.

        If something like del C:\*.* somehow ended up deleting your D: drive too, we wouldn’t stop hearing the end of it, but here on Linux systems, it is a perfectly normal thing, and people somehow DEFEND this atrocity lmfao.

        rm shouldn’t exist at its current form. Full stop.

      • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Linux treats users like a person and Windows treats users like children. Be the person Linux trusts you to be.

      • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        There is a difference between telling your computer to delete something and the computer complying, and doing a windows update only to find it’s corrupted your data or straight up killed your disk.

        I’m not going to get angry when I tell my PC to delete a file and it actually does it.

  • Dragomus@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Bah, each time I want to do the manual upgrade from 23h2 I have to postpone it again due to some stupid bug or annoying feature that makes me reconsider doing it.