Why does Microsoft Windows get slower day after day?
Even the latest version of Windows has a number of serious design flaws resulting in it becoming slower and slower as time goes on. You've probably heard more than once someone say "My computer is getting sluggish, I'm going to reinstall". Reinstalling Windows solves the problem... until the next time.
You may think this is just how all computers work: That they have very new technology, and they just are not really stable yet. Well, try Linux and you'll be surprised. Five years from now, your system will be just as fast and responsive as the day you installed it, not to mention that you won't have any viruses, adware, trojans, worms, etc., that would force you to reinstall anyway.
I have managed to convince many people to switch to Linux, while keeping Windows on their hard disk, because they needed to use some piece of software that Linux doesn't have (like Autocad), so they use both systems. Since the day they switched, most of them have reinstalled Windows about once in a year or two; but Linux didn't let them down, and is still running perfectly well and is still snappy today.
Linux lets you spend more time surfing, working, and playing and less time reinstalling over and over again.
Help for Windows users with infected computers
I started to write this in a blog post on this site but I decided that the subject matter would be better served as a full-fledged article where you, the reader, could post comments or questions, if wanted.
This past Tuesday I traveled to one of my relative's home to check on their 3 computers. All 3 of their computers had issues but one of them was so infected that I opted to bring it home with me because I have a small computer lab setup with several pieces of equipment that make it easier to work on PCs. These relatives are avid windows users and until I showed them Peach OSI, neither had heard of a Linux system, let alone used one. This particular computer could not be used at all for all the pop-ups and resources that were being used by the massive amount of viruses, trojans, worms, key loggers, malware - well you get the picture. According to Windows software Malewarebytes, there were over 8,000 pieces of malware on this 1 Windows PC. Malewarebytes took just over 2 hours to run to the point that it gave me that information and then the PC froze up - it was unable to handle all the open screens that the popups had brought to the surface. I've never heard of such an infected computer, let alone seen one and I've been working on computers for over 40 years. My relative is a retired photographer and as you can imagine he had a lot of important images on the infected PC as well as some important documents. In the hopes that my experiences with this PC might help someone else, I am writing this article to document what steps I had to take to return this computer to a usable state.
Linux drastically improves gaming on a MacBook
Note: Peach OSI is a derivative of Ubuntu
For a couple of years, Valve has been saying that, when properly optimized, games run faster on Linux than on Windows. Granted, the company hyped Linux — most notably, Ubuntu — for quite some time because its upcoming Steam Machine was set to use Linux as its operating system of choice, as Valve tried to forego Windows.
Regardless of Valve’s seemingly incessant Linux-based claims and pleas, the majority of the gaming world didn’t care very much, mainly because of Linux’s limited gaming library — it doesn’t matter if games run faster on Linux if there are no games on Linux. Now, though, a new experiment carried out by Michael Larabel of Phoronix has found that if you install Ubuntu 14.04 on a MacBook, the gaming performance of the computer drastically increases.