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  3. it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

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  • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

    it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

    no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

    https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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    #21

    @davidgerard trust: once it's gone, it's gone

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      @davidgerard No it’s okay I’m good with Linux now. Microsoft, you can stop trying.

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      #22

      @woltiv @davidgerard I switched the ol' desktop from 2010 and "TV laptop" from 2015 from Win10 to #Q4OS last year, and noticed that Lord of the Rings Online (a Windows game) runs *better* on those than it did in Windows.

      For normal use (Vivaldi, VLC, torrenting, file and media server, etc.) things are far better than they were in Windows...

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      • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

        it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

        no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

        https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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        #23

        @davidgerard

        Every time I talked to the Windows team, I was told that backwards compatibility was the reason that they couldn't do refactorings to improve security / performance / programmer model.

        Then I'd go home and run old Windows apps on my Mac under WINE that failed to start under Windows 10.

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        • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

          it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

          no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

          https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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          #24

          @davidgerard It would be highly funny to me if enough companies decided to optimize their games to work with the SteamDeck/SteamOS, MS would be forced to maintain compatibility with WINE instead of the other way around

          And on that day, I would laugh my ass off

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            @davidgerard

            Every time I talked to the Windows team, I was told that backwards compatibility was the reason that they couldn't do refactorings to improve security / performance / programmer model.

            Then I'd go home and run old Windows apps on my Mac under WINE that failed to start under Windows 10.

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            #25

            @david_chisnall @davidgerard backwards compatibility is very much a sacred cow when it comes to Windows. There are huge customers that can move the revenue needle, who still need OLE32. There are thousands of applications that are still in use that need OLE32.

            And they've always essentially promised that things will always be backwards compatible. If it worked on Windows 3.11, then it will basically keep working, forever. Which is no small feat to begin with.

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              @davidgerard
              Microsoft don't realise how bad their experience truely is when compared to linux. They need to ship with drivers built in and decent software options from the get go, and they can't and won't.
              I can rebuild my daily runner from bare drives and a usb key in under an hour. Never ever have i been able to do that with Windows.

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              #26

              @bloognoo @davidgerard In the last few years, they managed to make Calculator, Notepad, and the Taskbar feel unreliable and janky. I don't think they know what 'quality' is, so it's hard to imagine that they can achieve it.

              IMO, Windows is long overdue for a deep refactor. Keep the kernel, but break-up the various runtimes for different eras of the OS into immutable and separated blobs, and then run apps on those. I don't mind waiting a few seconds for legacy apps to fire-up a legacy runtime if it means my system won't consume 11GB RAM just to get to a desktop.

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              • ? Gast

                @david_chisnall @davidgerard backwards compatibility is very much a sacred cow when it comes to Windows. There are huge customers that can move the revenue needle, who still need OLE32. There are thousands of applications that are still in use that need OLE32.

                And they've always essentially promised that things will always be backwards compatible. If it worked on Windows 3.11, then it will basically keep working, forever. Which is no small feat to begin with.

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                #27

                @rootwyrm @david_chisnall @davidgerard Win 3 (16-bit) applications don't work on Win 11 anyway. For all the rest of legacy applications (from Win 2000 to Win 10) they can always ask Copilot to vibe code something like WINE for them, assuming it's not busy converting all C++ code to Rust.

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                • ? Gast

                  @rootwyrm @david_chisnall @davidgerard Win 3 (16-bit) applications don't work on Win 11 anyway. For all the rest of legacy applications (from Win 2000 to Win 10) they can always ask Copilot to vibe code something like WINE for them, assuming it's not busy converting all C++ code to Rust.

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                  #28

                  @dukeboitans @david_chisnall @davidgerard oh, no, that's just flat out wrong. The old 16-bit stuff still works more or less perfectly with the compatibility shims. That's what NTVDM is for. It's why OTVDM is a thing and works even though it's "obsolete" technology.

                  It's impressive and terrifying at the same time. Especially when you consider that in theory, you can in-place upgrade from Windows 3.11 all the way to 11.

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                  • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                    it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

                    no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

                    https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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                    #29

                    @davidgerard It's actually funnier than that: it isn't 'Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance', it's 'Windows might catch up to Linux *running Windows games, pretending to be Windows* in gaming performance'.

                    It says a lot when emulating something is quicker than running the thing natively.

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                      @dukeboitans @david_chisnall @davidgerard oh, no, that's just flat out wrong. The old 16-bit stuff still works more or less perfectly with the compatibility shims. That's what NTVDM is for. It's why OTVDM is a thing and works even though it's "obsolete" technology.

                      It's impressive and terrifying at the same time. Especially when you consider that in theory, you can in-place upgrade from Windows 3.11 all the way to 11.

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                      #30

                      @rootwyrm @david_chisnall @davidgerard idk, at microsoft they don't seem to know this, you tell them. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-client/application-management/x64-windows-not-support-16-bit-programs

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                      • ? Gast

                        @rootwyrm @david_chisnall @davidgerard idk, at microsoft they don't seem to know this, you tell them. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-client/application-management/x64-windows-not-support-16-bit-programs

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                        #31

                        @dukeboitans @david_chisnall @davidgerard that's the official policy; nothing that old is "officially" supported. But like all things with Microsoft, enough money changes it.

                        https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/compatibility/ntvdm-and-16-bit-app-support

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                        • ? Gast

                          @dukeboitans @david_chisnall @davidgerard that's the official policy; nothing that old is "officially" supported. But like all things with Microsoft, enough money changes it.

                          https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/compatibility/ntvdm-and-16-bit-app-support

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                          #32

                          @rootwyrm @david_chisnall @davidgerard It's right at the start: "for all IA-32 editions of the Windows NT family (not included with 64-bit versions of the OS)." I don't know what sorcery is required to make it run on Win 11, but whatever it is it's not official, I don't think it can be considered as a promise of any kind. I think it's time to drop this mythological backward compatibility.

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                          • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                            it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

                            no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

                            https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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                            #33

                            @davidgerard

                            As long as Microsoft ties itself to fossil fuel funded AI, no thanks.
                            https://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-google-hand-dissident-data-to-saudi-arabia-activists-say-2023-7

                            https://www.forbes.com/sites/mattdurot/2025/07/17/bill-gates-charles-koch-and-three-other-billionaires-are-giving-1-billion-to-enhance-economic-mobility-in-the-us/

                            https://news.microsoft.com/source/emea/2026/02/microsoft-accelerates-ai-skilling-in-saudi-arabia-helping-3-million-people-acquire-ai-skills-by-2030/

                            https://datacentremagazine.com/news/when-will-microsoft-saudi-data-centre-region-go-live

                            Aligning themselves with fascists like Larry Ellison, Elon Musk, Peter Thiel & #PrinceBonesaw

                            Fund a Fascist & Find Out.
                            https://www.cnbc.com/2026/01/29/microsoft-market-cap-earnings.html

                            https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/27/technology/saudi-arabia-ai-exporter.html

                            They deserve their consequences, they've earned them.
                            https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/13/technology/amazon-google-persian-gulf-war.html

                            https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/04/23/why-oracle-stock-just-dropped/

                            https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm296jzzl9yo

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                              @rootwyrm @david_chisnall @davidgerard It's right at the start: "for all IA-32 editions of the Windows NT family (not included with 64-bit versions of the OS)." I don't know what sorcery is required to make it run on Win 11, but whatever it is it's not official, I don't think it can be considered as a promise of any kind. I think it's time to drop this mythological backward compatibility.

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                              #34

                              @dukeboitans @rootwyrm @davidgerard

                              There's also the note below:

                              NTVDM is a Feature on Demand and only supported on the x86 version of Windows. It is not supported on x64 and ARM versions of Windows, which do not support 16-bit x86 code of any kind, including DOS programs.

                              Note that the first use of x86 is Windows terminology, meaning x86-32, the second means x86. The middle one where they say x64 means x86-64.

                              As I recall, this was because there's no mechanism to jump to 16-bit mode from long mode on x86. There are some ways of making it work, but they're very clunky. And, given how fast DOSBox is on modern hardware, it's usually simpler to run Win16 in an emulator than try.

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                              • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                                it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

                                no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

                                https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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                                #35

                                @davidgerard@circumstances.run I have been saying for years that a lot (not all, but a lot) of AAA windows games run better on wine/proton, but especially lately I've noticed some things like 1% frame times and graphics stutter being better on linux, which makes the games feel nicer too lol

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                                • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                                  it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

                                  no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

                                  https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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                                  #36

                                  @davidgerard LOL, also LMAO

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                                  • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                                    it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

                                    no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

                                    https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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                                    #37

                                    @davidgerard

                                    LMAO, 🤣

                                    Save microsoft or any other bully corporation who over-thew the Peoples Gov, should never, ever, happen.

                                    Eat the bully rich arseholes! Make them pay! on so many levels or scales.

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                                    • ? Gast

                                      @davidgerard It's actually funnier than that: it isn't 'Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance', it's 'Windows might catch up to Linux *running Windows games, pretending to be Windows* in gaming performance'.

                                      It says a lot when emulating something is quicker than running the thing natively.

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                                      #38

                                      @dickon @davidgerard how the turntables

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                                        @davidgerard
                                        Took them long enough to admit that stock Windows 11 is noticeably worse than stock Win10.
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                                        #39

                                        @moses_izumi @davidgerard I was excited when it first came out cos it looked nicer to me visually. Then I saw the new right click menu. It then went downhill from there...

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                                        • davidgerard@circumstances.runD davidgerard@circumstances.run

                                          it's possible that one day Windows might catch up to Linux in gaming performance

                                          no really, Microsoft is literally using SteamOS as its benchmark and working hard to catch up to it in performance, this is not a drill

                                          https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/what-is-windows-k2-everything-you-need-to-know-saving-windows-11

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                                          #40

                                          @davidgerard Nice they understand the issue on a technical level, but generally: Whatever OS could run twice as fast as Linux and I still wouldn't consider switching for as long as the company maintaining it is such a shitshow.

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