Giving up on modern software.

namename11

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Dec 25, 2025
Messages
293
Reaction score
169
Trophies
1
XP
667
Country
United States
Since macOS keeps getting shittier and more intrusive by the day, I was recently in the market for a decent x64 laptop to install Linux on and settled on a ThinkPad T16. It didn't feel or look as nice as my MacBook Pro but it was a lot more easily repairable, so I was fine with it.

I decided to go with Ubuntu since it's the most popular distribution from what I see, and everything was fine at first. But when I tried installing some system security updates the OS recommended, it froze up at 56% and wouldn't respond, so I had to turn it off. It wouldn't boot past the logo after that. No worries, I tried installing it again and it failed in exactly the same way.

I know there was probably a way to fix it, like there always is, but I didn't buy a part time job and decided to try Windows.

I installed Windows 11 IoT LTSC and it was actually fine, at least until I updated it. It would not boot after that. I tried to reinstall it but it refused to install!

So I decided to move over to my MacBook Pro with Mojave and have been using it for weeks now. It's crazy that a 8 year old OS on a 11 year old device is more usable than anything modern I tried.

It is insecure as fuck, but I don't have anything important on it and its on a separate network, so I'm not particularly bothered.

If there's another excellent old OS I should try, let me know!
 
Honestly, at this point it feels like Ubuntu is trying to follow in the footsteps of Windows, it's become somewhat bloated, I'd recommend giving Mint a try, it's a nice all-round OS. Though, depending on what you use the PC for some other OS might be better.
 
I'd have put asahi linux on your mac, if it's a newer one. and if it's an older x64 one, easy too :)
 
Since macOS keeps getting shittier and more intrusive by the day, I was recently in the market for a decent x64 laptop to install Linux on and settled on a ThinkPad T16. It didn't feel or look as nice as my MacBook Pro but it was a lot more easily repairable, so I was fine with it.

I decided to go with Ubuntu since it's the most popular distribution from what I see, and everything was fine at first. But when I tried installing some system security updates the OS recommended, it froze up at 56% and wouldn't respond, so I had to turn it off. It wouldn't boot past the logo after that. No worries, I tried installing it again and it failed in exactly the same way.

I know there was probably a way to fix it, like there always is, but I didn't buy a part time job and decided to try Windows.

I installed Windows 11 IoT LTSC and it was actually fine, at least until I updated it. It would not boot after that. I tried to reinstall it but it refused to install!

So I decided to move over to my MacBook Pro with Mojave and have been using it for weeks now. It's crazy that a 8 year old OS on a 11 year old device is more usable than anything modern I tried.

It is insecure as fuck, but I don't have anything important on it and its on a separate network, so I'm not particularly bothered.

If there's another excellent old OS I should try, let me know!
OS failing to install is typically a sure sign of hardware issues. Pair that with the issues with updating on *both* Linux and Windows, probably a driver or something that got updated caused the faulty hardware to freak out.
Post automatically merged:

Honestly, at this point it feels like Ubuntu is trying to follow in the footsteps of Windows, it's become somewhat bloated, I'd recommend giving Mint a try, it's a nice all-round OS. Though, depending on what you use the PC for some other OS might be better.
Mint is just Ubuntu with a different DE. Nothing wrong with that, but you can put a different DE on Ubuntu too, if the default one is too bloated for you.
 
So I decided to move over to my MacBook Pro with Mojave and have been using it for weeks now. It's crazy that a 8 year old OS on a 11 year old device is more usable than anything modern I tried.

It is insecure as fuck, but I don't have anything important on it and its on a separate network, so I'm not particularly bothered.
Probably you're not bothered when your compromised machine is used as an attack vector against other people either. Way to go...
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum