Why there are a lot of people migrating from Windows to Linux these days?
This became relevant specially after 2023
2 comments
There are a few different factors. I think the biggest is that the lifecycle for windows 10 is ending. Microsoft is pushing the upgrade, but 11 has Recall which is essentially AI spyware. Many folks are trying to push Linux instead of upgrading when support is fully cut off
This is the top-voted answer, but it's missing one key point: Windows 11 mandates a TPM chip, a secure cryptographic processor that (amongst other things, both good and bad) allows an OS to verify that its boot files haven't been tampered with.
A lot of old computers don't have this chip, making this the first Windows edition in many years where the upgrade process isn't smooth and painless. If you don't have this chip you straight-up can't install Windows 11 on that machine without using hacks or workarounds, workarounds that Microsoft have been actively patching out to prevent TPM-less installs.
Rather than throw away their still perfectly fine computers to buy a new machine they don't need - for a dubious "upgrade" they don't even want - a lot of users are choosing to switch to Linux so they can keep their current PCs while still enjoying software and security updates.
There are a few different factors. I think the biggest is that the lifecycle for windows 10 is ending. Microsoft is pushing the upgrade, but 11 has Recall which is essentially AI spyware. Many folks are trying to push Linux instead of upgrading when support is fully cut off
This is the top-voted answer, but it's missing one key point: Windows 11 mandates a TPM chip, a secure cryptographic processor that (amongst other things, both good and bad) allows an OS to verify that its boot files haven't been tampered with.
A lot of old computers don't have this chip, making this the first Windows edition in many years where the upgrade process isn't smooth and painless. If you don't have this chip you straight-up can't install Windows 11 on that machine without using hacks or workarounds, workarounds that Microsoft have been actively patching out to prevent TPM-less installs.
Rather than throw away their still perfectly fine computers to buy a new machine they don't need - for a dubious "upgrade" they don't even want - a lot of users are choosing to switch to Linux so they can keep their current PCs while still enjoying software and security updates.