Running Win10 after end of life

techlists at phpcoderusa.com techlists at phpcoderusa.com
Sun May 4 19:36:40 MST 2025


David,

I've liked Linux since I first came to know about it, which was around 
1998.

I hope to become M$ free this year.  Linux meets all of my needs, 
however that was not always the case.

I used to salivate over MACs.  They are expensive.  I over bought about 
10 years ago. My Daily is an i5 with 4 cores and 4 threads.  I updated 
it to 16GB of RAM years ago and changed to an SSD. I run Kubuntu on it.

I have a second box that is almost identical that is not getting any 
use.  I bought a Dell mini tower about 10 years ago that might have an 
i3 and 6GB of RAM.  Did not complete the project I bought it for. I was 
going to build a LAMP+ web server and host one of my web sites.  Still 
on my radar.

I have a lot of old hardware that I can install Linux on and do a 
project.

The reason I like Linux over the MAC is I own old hardware, and MAC is 
too expensive.

My friend who owns a data center told me he prefers MAC over Linux 
because he is tired of fixing Linux.

I attended a Drupal conference at ASU more than a few years ago and most 
everyone owned MAC.

I did not know there was a bias on the list.

- Keith



On 2025-05-03 21:30, David Schwartz via PLUG-discuss wrote:
> Would someone kindly tell me what’s so special about their favorite 
> version of Linux is versus MacOS, which is a BSD Unix derivative?
> 
> I’ve think I’ve mentioned my harem of Macs:
> 
> * 2014 Mac Mini
> * 2014 MacBook Pro
> * 2018 Mac Mini
> * 2024 Mac Mini
> 
> They’re all still working just fine, except the MBP’s battery is 
> bloating up for the 2nd time. (I hardly use it and if you keep it 
> plugged-in, the battery bloats up.)
> 
> I get newer ones because they get faster, handle more RAM and SSD, and 
> the OS can’t be upgraded past a certain point. Which is why I keep the 
> older ones around. (The older ones let you upgrade RAM and some the 
> SSD. With the newer ones, you’re stuck with what it comes with.)
> 
> One of them (2018) has a VirtualBox VM on that runs Win10 that I do all 
> of my Windows-dependent stuff on. I don’t see why I’d need to upgrade 
> it to Win11, and nobody here has given me anything worth considering.
> 
> BTW, I have an older Acer box (maybe from 2000) that’s a bit smaller 
> than an old Mac Mini that runs Win XP; if anybody wants it to run Linux 
> on for some reason, let me know.
> 
> My point is, the hardware gets old, sometimes degrades (ie, the battery 
> on the MBP), the latest OS and apps can no longer be upgraded, but it 
> still works fine if you want to keep using it. I’m not sure why my 
> older Mac Minis still keep running but everybody thinks my Win10 
> machines are going to turn into nuclear bombs in a few months just 
> because MS stops updating them. Cripes, do you know how hard it is to 
> keep Windows from constatly updating itself anyway? MacOS keeps asking 
> even though it’s says it can’t if I say OK!
> 
> I have apps on both my 2014 and 2018 Mac Minis that will stop working 
> if I upgrade the OS, so I refuse.
> 
> And now it seems you can’t run VMs on M-series CPUs that contain any 
> version of Windows unless you use one specific version of Parallels 
> with an ARM-based version of Windows, and it reportedly runs slower 
> than crap.
> 
> Just for fun, I went from 36GB of RAM to 64GB in my 2018 model and 
> where before the fan would constantly be running, now it never comes 
> on.
> 
> Macs run Unix. It’s not like I’m a crazy-ass Mac fan — I just find them 
> to be WAY more stable than Windows machines.
> 
> When I need to get down to the command-line, the *nix shell is FAR more 
> powerful than the DOS Command line. But I rarely ever need to do that 
> on ANY of them lately. I think the only reasons I’ve run the Mac’s 
> Terminal is to use the shell to find some specific files because find 
> piped into grep works a whole lot better than the search bar in the 
> Finder.
> 
> So while I understand (and share) the “anti-Windows” sentiments here, I 
> don’t get the “pro-Linux” but “anti-Mac” attitude because Macs are all 
> Unix machines at their core.
> 
> I’ve tossed out maybe a dozen DOS and Windows machines in my life. My 
> first Mac (a first gen Intel iMac) died and I actually sold it on eBay 
> for almost $500! I’ve bought and sold some other Macs and never had to 
> toss a single one into the trash. I’m not eager to replace the battery 
> on my MBP again, but it will still be way cheaper than a new MBP.
> 
> -David Schwartz
> 
> 
>> On May 3, 2025, at 4:10 PM, Keith Smith via PLUG-discuss 
>> <plug-discuss at lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
>> 
>> Thanks Rusty!!  I agree!!
>> 
> 
> ---------------------------------------------------
> PLUG-discuss mailing list: PLUG-discuss at lists.phxlinux.org
> To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings:
> https://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss


More information about the PLUG-discuss mailing list