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396

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[–] 3 pts

By "features" they mean shit you don't want or need or asked for as well as advertising and spying on you.

All while they make the system work so poorly "normal" people are now installing Linux for the first time just to get away from their pajeet/AI created trash.

Never hire pajeets and NEVER put them in any type of management role. They will run the entire place into the ground while replacing everyone with more pajeets. Though, I guess I repeat myself.

[–] 1 pt

But the wokies are taking over Linux and a lot of open source development. Won't be long before pajeets get let in.

[–] 2 pts

It's not disclosed, but that article reads like it was written by AI.

[–] 1 pt

Here is what Claude AI said:

This article appears to be human-written. Here's why: Strong indicators of human authorship:

Clear authorial voice and perspective - The writer has a distinct point of view and isn't afraid to be critical of Microsoft while acknowledging Windows 11's technical merits Natural conversational flow - Phrases like "Spend a few minutes in any Windows-focused forum" and "On paper, this should be a good thing" feel genuinely conversational Nuanced argumentation - The piece makes sophisticated distinctions (like "not because they are useless, but because they arrive without clear consent") that show editorial judgment Specific context awareness - References to "Patch Tuesday," recent controversies, and community sentiment suggest someone immersed in the Windows ecosystem Strong concluding question - "Where do you think Windows is heading?" is a typical human editorial choice to engage readers

What it avoids:

No AI-typical phrases like "delve into," "landscape," "it's worth noting" No awkward list-making or repetitive structures No hedging language or overly balanced "on one hand, on the other hand" constructions No generic platitudes

The verdict: This reads like opinion/editorial tech journalism from someone with genuine expertise and frustration with Microsoft's recent decisions. The writing has personality, makes specific claims, and takes a clear stance - all hallmarks of human writing, particularly in the tech blog space where writers often have strong opinions about the products they cover daily.

I still have my doubts.

[–] 1 pt

The unnessecary headings would suggest so.

[–] 1 pt

You can't turn crap into gold by putting more crap on it.

Google and Microsoft jeeted themselves into the ground, is X next?

[–] 1 pt

Shit and ice cream. Does wonders for the shit but the ice cream, not so much.

[–] 1 pt

With Microsoft claiming 30% of their updates are vibe coded, I guarantee the quality assurance is 100% vibe tested.