Condobloke
Well-Known Member
Two Ways to Completely Remove Microsoft Copilot From Windows 11
You can block AI services you didn't ask for.
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Two Ways to Completely Remove Microsoft Copilot From Windows 11
You can block AI services you didn't ask for.au.lifehacker.com
Well, it was posted in Offtopic.Someone is still using Microslop? Confused.
I know I know. Let me rephrase:Well, it was posted in Offtopic.![]()
Or BSD!One way .. Install Linux distro...![]()
Sorry, that's -just too far- off topic.
Is masochism still a thing?I feel sorry for windows users, they still fight over how to remove bloat that MS pushes into OS, how to bypass this or that etc.
not sure what you mean, maybe you wanted to use some other term?Is masochism still a thing?
Why not use VM? You can attach USB and PCI-E devices exclusively to a VM nowadays, so if your engineering program rely on those, you could do it without leaving Linux host.Used GNU/Linux as main OS since about 2003 but still dual boot Windows occasionally to run the odd engineering program that has no equivalent. It would make work unnecessarily tedious not to have access to a Windows boot. Shutup10++ prevents the force feeding of AI and also disables most of the telemetry.
No, it was sarcasm but it didn't land wellnot sure what you mean, maybe you wanted to use some other term?
Don't use Win 11 often enough for that. Already have a cut down XP VM (without networking) for running legacy win16 and win32 programs.Why not use VM? You can attach USB and PCI-E devices exclusively to a VM nowadays, so if your engineering program rely on those, you could do it without leaving Linux host.
You don't use Win 11 often enough to put it in VM, where it doesn't take any space (apart from HDD image), no extra partitions, no dual boot menu, no complications, you can spin it up in 5 seconds without leaving your desktop...Don't use Win 11 often enough for that. Already have a cut down XP VM (without networking) for running legacy win16 and win32 programs.