So, it is a symbiotic relationship.
MS Partners, like OEMs and device manufacturers, provide Windows/Office pre-installed, and manufacturers offer Windows-only drivers. MS keeps changing things so that the new version runs well if you buy a new OEM computer or device. I posted this message because the kernel, starting with RHEL 9.5, warns during boot that a future major release (RHEL 10?) will probably not support my CPU. This means RHEL is also trying out the MS strategy. Anyway, I ordered a new Computer, which I hope RHEL versions will run for another 15 years. (I bought the current Dell Desktop in 2010). Thank you all for the interesting information you shared. I can download a Red Hat AI image and try it out on the new PC once I get it.
Thanks, --- Lee
On Tue, Jan 28, 2025 at 3:51 AM Patrick O'Callaghan pocallaghan@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, 2025-01-28 at 09:13 +1100, Stephen Morris wrote:
I don't play any games with anti-cheat systems. AFAIK these are all multi-player, which doesn't interest me. The Windows anti-cheat systems require kernel-level modifications, so it's hardly surprising that they don't work on Linux.
True, but when the files that are documented to run to fix issues with that system under Windows don't exist under linux, it seems that steam has done a different install under linux, so I would have expected that it would have installed linux compatible versions of the files, but that doesn't seem to have happened.
What files are you talking about?
poc
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