Windows 11 Debloat Script/Program?
from PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 16:36
https://sh.itjust.works/post/48095799

Is there an “standard” Windows 11 debloat script or software that I could use? Things like removing bloatware, and disabling as many of the AI features as possible?

Also, to head this off, I can’t use Linux because my mouse is unsupported.

Thanks!

Edit: I used WinUtil. Thanks again!

#nostupidquestions

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SynonymousStoat@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 16:47 next collapse

I used Chris Titus’ winutil. There’s a lot to it, but it’s pretty easy to find videos that explain what all of the options are

xePBMg9@lemmynsfw.com on 18 Oct 01:25 collapse
Steve@communick.news on 17 Oct 17:07 next collapse

privacy.sexy

Is an online script builder you can use to do all manner of things. The first time I used it I went hog wild picking all sorts of things, and made my matching practically unusable. So be careful and stick to their recommendations unless you know exactly what you want to kill.

yesman@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 17:10 next collapse

The problem with Windows ‘debloat’ scripts is that they monkey with esoteric gedit policies and registry tweaks.

Any Windows update, even security ones, can break the tweaks, cause bugs, or even instability. And naturally the users have no idea which of the tweaks is causing the problem. Especially when its been months since you used the scripts.

Now “deep customization” can break Linux too. The difference is that Linux developers are not going break your tweaks on purpose. For example, Windows recently closed some of the workarounds to install Windows on a local account.

Microsoft decides what users can do with Windows. Company officials have admitted that they’re already coding the OS with AI, and that future Windows versions are going to be AI powered. The Recall behavior of taking screenshots to be analyzed by AI to catalogue everything you do isn’t being developed as a Windows feature, but a core functionality of the OS.

What kind of mouse are you using anyway?

PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works on 17 Oct 23:07 collapse

What kind of mouse are you using anyway?

Razer Naga X. I spent all day yesterday trying to get it working in Mint, but had no luck. Nothing supports button rebinding, nonetheless DPI changes with button remapping.

Edit: made it slightly more clear

dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 17:24 next collapse

Consider the IoT Enterprise LTSC builds. These come premade from Microsoft with less bloat (or none, in the case of the Win10 IoT version), and don’t shove the consumer features down your throat on every update because they’re designed for mission critical embedded applications.

I have 10 IoT LTSC running on most of our machines at work because a significant chunk of our hardware is not Windows 11 “ready” and we use many vendor-specific things that don’t work in Linux or Wine, and I use 11 IoT LTSC at home (locked to 23H2 so my Mixed Reality VR headset remains working!) without incident.

massgrave.dev

Without either of the above restrictions if I were you I would shop for a new mouse.

poweruser@lemmy.sdf.org on 17 Oct 19:45 next collapse

This is the one I use on my work PC: github.com/Raphire/Win11Debloat

Mostly what it does is change things back to how they were on older Windows versions. E.g. the start menu is aligned to the left corner instead of the center. It is great at removing unnecessary bloat apps like Xbox Game Bar, and disabling various telemetry and ads such as the spam Bing search in the start menu.

I also found that PC had an annoying driver suite (resource hog) called something like “AMD Adrenaline Edition” that the debloat script missed. I had to uninstall the factory graphics driver and reinstall the “minimal, driver only” version from AMD.

Use at your own risk of course. Microsoft often breaks these things with Windows updates

pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Oct 06:01 collapse

Yeah that’s the one we use in IT

bizarroland@lemmy.world on 17 Oct 23:23 next collapse

There’s also FLYOOBE, which will let you do stuff like uninstall a bunch of the apps that are installed by default, disable AI shit, and set some of your basic interface settings all in one relatively convenient application.

MuttMutt@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 00:14 next collapse

Your mouse is likely supported if you search. pwr-solaar.github.io/Solaar/

PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works on 18 Oct 02:15 collapse

My mouse isn’t Logitech, its Razor. The Naga X.

dubyakay@lemmy.ca on 18 Oct 03:19 next collapse

openrazer.github.io/#devices

Naga X is among the supported devices. You just searched for Razor instead of Razer, most likely.

Edit: I’ve read your other comment. Linux Mint may not have the latest kernel that supports your mouse properly. I’d suggest a rolling release distro like Fedora, OpenSUSE Tumbleweed or… Arch (via Arch Installer or EndeavourOS to make your life easier) instead.

PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works on 18 Oct 03:40 collapse

OpenRazer unfortunately doesn’t support rebinding buttons.

dubyakay@lemmy.ca on 18 Oct 03:41 collapse

Not yet anyway!

Time to ditch that mouse. Don’t let it be your excuse for staying a hostage.

MuttMutt@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 03:21 collapse

Ods are that a similar to is available. Just gotta search for it.

PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works on 18 Oct 03:41 collapse

Unfortunately not. Theres some tools for the RGB, or one-off tweaks like changing DPI and polling rate in the UI, but nothing that offers button rebinding, nonetheless profile control.

MuttMutt@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 09:07 collapse

Then it’s time to participate in the community. Find a project that does something similar. Get the hardware ID’s and configuration and submit it to the project as an added request. Stick a twenty dollar bounty on it. How much is your time worth and how much are you wasting trying to solve a problem that will continue to be more invasive? Windows isn’t free, it costs your time to fix a corporate decision.

If we would stick a few bucks in the coffer from time to time supporting our community through cash and submitting info and time helping it won’t take long before more things work even better. And we will no longer have to accept the wishes of the corporate masters. Microsoft and apple (account many others) are the IBM of the current generation and have been for a while. Look at the price of a computer before they created compatability in 3rd party computers. Microsoft isn’t losing money on home users either because they hover up all the information. Even installing software that breaks their access gives them info, that’s how they know how far to push it.

expr@programming.dev on 18 Oct 02:39 next collapse

Erm, it looks to me that there is a project to make them work on Linux: openrazer.github.io.

Also… TBH if a mouse doesn’t work on Linux that kind of makes it a bad mouse, IMO. I would just get a different mouse if it was an actual issue. It’s not like it’s a mechanical keyboard or something.

PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works on 18 Oct 03:46 collapse

Erm, it looks to me that there is a project to make them work on Linux: openrazer.github.io.

It only covers the absolute basics. Not even button rebinding.

Also… TBH if a mouse doesn’t work on Linux that kind of makes it a bad mouse, IMO. I would just get a different mouse if it was an actual issue. It’s not like it’s a mechanical keyboard or something.

I mean, even ignoring that, its pretty bad. Doesn’t even have on-board memory. Unfortunately, its what I’m stuck with, given that I can’t afford a new one.

kvrrrooo@lemmy.world on 18 Oct 03:31 next collapse

While not what you asked,

I have the same mouse model and use it with EndeavourOS and play WoW. I had the same issue with binding…In the end I just created a win 10 VM through VirtualBox, passed through the Naga to the VM, installed the Razor software in the VM and did the button binding there. Saved the profile to the mouse. disconnected the USB passthough and the binds all worked in Linux. Note I had to once off disconnect and reconnect the usb cable for the changes to take effect in Linux. Also had to plug in a temp mouse so that I could control everything while the usb passthrough to the VM.

So yeah not what you wanted but there an easy way to get the binding to work…

PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works on 18 Oct 03:38 collapse

Are you sure its the same as the Naga X, because I’m 99% sure the Naga X doesn’t have on-board memory? The earlier and more expensive ones do, but the X is the cheapo option.

FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au on 18 Oct 04:05 next collapse

Just be aware that be doing this you’ll likely end up with a buggy, broken OS, as these things aren’t just made to be removed by some random scripts.

Cevilia@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 18 Oct 05:16 collapse

Install Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC. It comes with much less bloatware and no AI support.