He/Him 🏳️‍🌈 🏴‍☠️

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Joined 4 months ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2025

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  • Never tried any of this before, I’ve barely touched Windows (outside of work) since 2023.

    But a few of the more tech savvy people I know had done clean installs of Windows 10 LTSC IoT and recommended it.

    So I just launched a VM and started looking stuff up to see if there was a way of doing it without needing a clean install. Because seems most people I know are more willing to risk running an EOL OS than actually backup their shit…



  • You can use regedit to make the LTSC IoT installer think you’re already on an LTSC IoT build so it just installs without doing a clean install.

    I first learnt about it from this Youtube video but they only show how to get the base LTSC version and not IoT which will get updates until 2032.

    Here’s the values I used.

    “CurrentBuild”=“19044”

    “CurrentBuildNumber”=“19044”

    “EditionID”=“IoTEnterpriseS”

    “ProductName”=“Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC 2021”

    “ReleaseId”=“2009”

    “DisplayVersion”=“21H2”

    I have them in a registry script along with txt guide I’ve been sending to my friends. Not sure if I can directly post them here however.


  • You can convert existing Windows 10 installs to LTSC or IoT, Without losing files. I’ve been helping a few people I know switch over the last few days.

    I would obviously like it if more people moved to Linux, but most people I know ain’t gonna more because of certain software…okay it’s mainly Fortnite and Call of Duty. >.>

    I’ll help anyone with it who actually wants to try Linux, I got at least one person to try dual booting.


  • I also used Notepadqq for the first year I used Linux, I ended up switching to Kate since it did everything I liked about Notepad++ and it came installed with my KDE desktop soooo.

    Also for the few times I gotta use a terminal text editor I use Micro (It really should be the default instead of Nano)









  • Okay two things.

    I didn’t set my pfp to clippy mainly because I’m lazy and don’t really comment on Youtube.

    People complaining people are only doing this to follow a trend are completely right. BUT! some of those trend chasers might actually stop and think about the message, and might realized we’re all being scammed by modern tech/software companies.

    I ain’t expecting some mass protest or anything, but it’s at the very least a small handful more people giving a shit about their relationship with technology. As apposed to most who just throw their information and money at any sign-up page that asks.


  • Honestly depends on the hardware. I still had an Nvidia card for the first year I used Linux and 90% of my issues stemmed from that…

    As for everything else I’ve had a much easier time with Linux than most people I know because I unintentionally bought peripherals that already worked great with Linux before I was even thinking about switching.

    A few people I know have tried Linux but ran into issues with their mice or audio equipment that require proprietary drivers or dedicated software to fully function. Most of these are the big name “gamer” brands like Razer.

    I had issues with Razers software all the way back on Windows 7 so I swore off buying anymore keyboards or mice that require 3rd party drivers so I never had an issue with them when switching over.