Make Windows Like Home - A Guide for Linux Refugees

As a Linux cult survivor, I still found myself hit by Stockholm syndrome reminiscing over a deep hole left by an operating system that relinquished control to myself only. However, I developed disillusionment from the constant maintenance and upkeep of a desktop that was just too unstable. The frequent distro hopping, struggles to run anything that isn’t in the package repositories, and another kernel module update that broke suspending my laptop and ruined the font-hinting. Wine and virtual machines just didn’t cut it from some of my essential tools and games. I didn’t consider dual-booting as a solution as it was impractical to maintain two separate systems and requiring a restart to switch between them

Eventually, which now seems ages ago, I conceded and returned to Windows 7, a world of strong hardware support and masterful backwards compatibility. As a Linux user, I watched in envy when my peers using Redmond’s software working out-of-the-box, a plethora of software available that I dearly missed and had a sense of denial.

I’m certain that I’m not the only one who went through this phase, akin to ditching a sect. The open-source operating system did expose us to unlimited possibilities and paradigms that no other platform could provide. If you want to soothe some of this recent nostalgia, this guide will help you make Windows a home that has some of the opulence that Linux provided. These pieces of software and tools will bring back many of the features that you loved from your previous religion.

My seven year old machine isn’t ready for retirement.

AtlasOS, Win11Debloat

Yes, I know you love your precious 7-row keyboard on the ancient ThinkPad. But let’s face it, you only have 4 GB of RAM to work with.

This seven year old Dell netbook runs the fantastic Arch-based EndeavourOS like a hummingbird.

Microsoft actually recommends 16 GB of RAM for Copilot, when just the predecessor version 10 only needed 4 GB. However, your Linux desktop can easily thrive on a measly one gigabyte. I can’t make the promise that it’s actually possible to make Windows just as lean, but there are ways to make it much less thirsty.

While officially Windows is only a single-party state with only one true distribution, there are concoctions that can actually be called distros. This is where I really have to plug AtlasOS, which proudly gives the finger to Microsoft and trims out a huge amount of bloat without sacrificing compatibility. Watch your RAM consumption be cut in half and gaming free of stuttering. The CPU can actually calm down a bit because there’s no more mysterious services eating resources. The system will just feel so much more peppy and actually compete with Microsoft’s magnum opus, version 7 or maybe a heavier desktop environment like KDE. As a nice bonus, it includes a ton of quality of life improvements that are too many to list here.

Notice how much less resources that AtlasOS uses compared to a fresh Windows 11 install.

Unlike other similar recipes like ReviOS and Tiny11, AtlasOS doesn’t require you to download a shady ISO that instills doubts about the system’s true integrity. Instead, it has essentially become a series of scripts that will nicely clean things up and as a bonus, including a whole bunch more of them that you can run post-install for even more tuning. Unfortunately, you won’t be able to use an existing installation and instead require you to redeploy from scratch. If you’re really brave, you can even disable Windows Defender which uses more resources than the cryptojacking software that it’s trying to protect you from.

Another shout-out, Win11Debloat will give you very fine grained control on doing much of what Atlas does to your existing Windows install. However, I consider this one for experienced users only, as it can do so much debloating that many apps won’t run anymore and break virtualization.

Pretend I never said this, but you can find OEM Windows ISOs and activation scripts on GitHub, through the MAS project. Just so I don’t find the SWAT team barging through my door, I’m supposed to say to only use your genuine license and report any piracy to your local authorities. Don’t copy that floppy!

I thought that advertising and telemetry were malware.

AtlasOS, ShutUp10++, Win11Debloat

I’m dating myself with my memories of BonziBuddy, the pioneer of spying and adware. Anti-malware packages were very quick to identify it as a threat to your system because of the unwelcome ads and running in the background sending each click to some shady data broker. The classic SpyBot - Search & Destroy was convinced that this supposed desktop assistant was a menace to your system. Many other pieces of software snuck in irritating full-screen advertisements such as μTorrent, a well-loved and lightweight file-sharing client, starting to plaster them straight into their UI. Antimalware organizations were quick to beg you to just get these travesties off your system.

However, when Microsoft decided to pull off the same tricks, they gave themselves a free pass to legitimize what was considered malicious back then. This is another plug for AtlasOS, which reliably prunes Windows from all the telemetry and advertisements. Microsoft was really convinced that AI was the future, and constantly reminded you that you just can’t live with Copilot. That is in addition to all the data-collecting, dare I say hoarding, that makes even the CIA green with envy, happening behind the scenes.

Now, if you really don’t want to start over again, O&O, well known in the past for their disk defragmentation utilities, made a tool aptly named ShutUp10++ to silence the constant onslaught of unwarranted ads and make sure that Microsoft doesn’t know about your secret porn habits. Again, Win11Debloat is just as apt at doing this but doesn’t have the nice easy-to-use UI that ShutUp10++ does.

ShutUp10++ has a nifty UI with a swath of options. Screenshot courtesy of O&O Software.

Package managers are the true setup wizards.

WinGet, Chocolatey, Ninite

Developers have made Windows synonymous with installation wizards, which encouraged users to just blindly click next over and over again until the software was installed. However, it resulted in a system that was just a jumbled mess (and maybe even performance hogging toolbars), with installation, uninstalls and updates done in completely different ways for each unique piece of software. It is only recently that more popular offerings started including an auto-update tool but I consider it lipstick on a pig, since it still uses these wizards silently. And there isn’t a way to run them all at once, it’s a one-by-one deal.

Using Ubuntu for the first time, I was blown away by apt-get and how deeply integrated to the system it was. Everything running on my PC was constantly kept up-to-date and software was just a click, or a terminal command away. I have fond memories of Synaptic Package Manager with thousands of packages to explore. Many credit Apple for introducing the concept of a centralized app store, but Linux distros had something just as convenient decades before iOS even existed.

Synaptic Package Manager running on MX Linux, a lightweight and quite popular distribution.

Now, these are more recent additions to the Windows ecosystem. But I can name WinGet and Chocolatey as convenient ways to get software cleanly installed on your system. WinGet is the newest one and has Microsoft’s blessing since they developed it themselves. However, Chocolatey has so much more packages to choose from and a bigger community. It doesn’t hurt to combine them but some consider it travesty to manage software with multiple tools. However, I consider this hypocrisy because Flatpak for example, is completely separate from the package manager on Linux systems and it is quite popular and even successful with Torvalds blessing.

Ninite is a must for many who are just getting their new install of Windows up and running. The selection of software is limited to only very popular offerings and uses wizards in the background, though thankfully prevents from bundled adware becoming present on your system. One nice feature is that running the Ninite installer again will automatically update all the software you installed with it.

Explorer can’t actually explore.

Total Commander, WinSCP, FileZilla, Start11, Classic Shell, Flow Launcher, Everything

Both Windows and macOS are guilty of including the worst file managers in existence, exaggeratedly so. You’ll have to find out what FTFF means, but Windows Explorer needs just as much work. In contrast, KDE’s Dolphin was incredibly powerful and even lightweights like Thunar were still capable with many plugins.

Total Commander brings the power of dual-pane file management to Windows, along with built-in archiving and extraction tools, and even the ability to connect to remote file servers. WinSCP does the same, but for file handling through SSH along with FileZilla.

You’d expect something as bloated as the Windows Indexer to provide some extremely powerful search features to your desktop. However, whether a file exists or not on your system will not guarantee that Explorer’s search will find it. This is where Everything comes in, which can reliably find any file on your system. Behind the scenes, it is an indexer, but it’s so lightweight that it seems magical that it’s actually able to scour your entire system with such ease.

Flow Launcher doing its thing.

The Start Menu is part of one of Explorer’s travesties but thankfully there are so many replacements. Stardock’s Start11 will bring back the familiar of the start menu that was so well done on Windows Vista and 7. Classic Shell is much more popular and comes with the wonderful price of zero with so much more customizability. The lesser well known StartAllBack has a different focus but it’s commercial just like Start11.

I’m surprised that it’s not very well known, but Flow Launcher brings a neat Spotlight-like search experience to Windows; a minimalistic search bar in the middle of your screen with convenient keyboard shortcuts. What makes Flow Launcher so powerful however is the huge multitude of plugins available for it. If I had to make you salivate, you’d be glad to know that there is an Everything plugin available.

Floating window managers are for the weak. Real men tile.

GlazeWM, Divvy, Groupy

Microsoft tends to be very unoriginal when naming products. So of course, the floating windows on your screen were just that: Windows. The Xerox Alto, the first notable GUI computer from the seventies, takes credit for being the originators of that paradigm, which as a reminder, let you scatter your applications anywhere on your screen comfortably overlapping each other. Ironically, Windows 1.0 that Steve Ballmer so proudly tried to sell was actually using tiling before Windows 95 made floating windows their staple. For the uninitiated, tiling window managers separate your application into neat sections on your screen, never overlapping each other and you have no choice but to do that.

One of the most powerful Linux features is the ability to change how your desktop worked, with the so-called desktop environments and window managers. Tiling window managers were born quite early on graphical Unix systems in general hosting tile-based window management. It’s a bit difficult to understand and use initially, but it’s hard to go back once you master their capabilities. There was this excellent video demo on xmonad that really attracted me to the concept but most people fell in love with i3. Mainly because it was so much more flexible with on-the-fly tiling layouts. In classic Linux fashion, multiple desktops were so seamless. And yes I know that Windows and macOS technically have multiple desktop support, but all I can is nice try.

Don Stewart shows off xmonad, a popular tiling window manager that he wrote entirely in Haskell

The excellent i3 window manager showcased in a VM running Arch Linux. (This is a really old screenshot, so don’t be surprised if the kernel version is from the stone ages).

Amethyst and bug.n were benevolent in their intention, but were just admirable tries to get tiling to work on Windows. They just had such a kludge that it didn’t instill confidence and felt more like hacks rather than actual tools.

Out-of-nowhere in 2023, GlazeWM came to the scene promising i3-style window management to Windows. And what made it so different is that it actually worked very reliably and really fooled you into thinking that you had native support for tiling on Windows. It even inherited i3’s keyboard shortcuts and intuitive configuration format and comes with a status bar reminiscent of i3bar called Zebar. It was very recently rewritten in Rust and really has set a benchmark when it comes to stability. The icing on the cake is the ability to drag-and-drop windows with your mouse and keep them within tiles.

Some other tools worth mentioning are Divvy, which also provides tiling, but in a completely manual fashion and Groupy bringing tabbed windows similar to modern web browsers for all applications.

I can’t help but script everything.

AutoHotkey, NirCmd, PowerShell

What Linux brought to my prominence is the power of scripting. The ability to automate repetitive tasks with little scripts but it wasn’t limited to only command line applications. Virtually all desktop features could be controlled with these scripts and that was a real sore spot when moving back to Windows.

AutoHotkey is so powerful that it has become a classic. From mapping simple tasks to global keyboard shortcuts to filling complex forms automatically. The syntax is a bit convoluted but still easy to understand. It is a must for anyone that want to supercharge their Windows desktop with its surprisingly deep integration with the Windows ecosystem.

NirSoft has a few tools to make a few tasks usable from the command line, notably NirCmd.

While you can use Windows Batch, bash and Python to write your scripts, I’m going to controversially say that the strongest scripting language is PowerShell. The Unix philosophy recommends using text for input and output of commands and treating everything as a file. However, the pain comes from actually parsing input and output and ends up making an unmaintainable mess. Maybe in the 70s when computers were doing simple tasks, this was the way to go, but computers have become so much more powerful. PowerShell basically throws the idea of using text as a way of communication through objects and APIs. Having well defined data structures means that parsing is obsolete and PowerShell scripts are a strong upgrade from interpreted shells to something as powerful as a typed programming language.

At this point, PowerShell can be used to configured almost every aspect of system administration though I doubt we’ll ever have a headless way of running Windows server. Linux and other Unix derivatives are still the champions when it comes to servers, web or otherwise.

I look cooler than everyone else using the terminal.

Windows Subsystem for Linux, ConEmu, PuTTY

This is something that Linux just does magically, which is its powerful command line utilities that can do even the most complex tasks. Whether you want to search for files, convert video formats or merge documents, it was all possible.

In the past, there were only really kludgy solutions. Cygwin and MinGW were pretty good attempts, but were a pain to install, and everything had to be compiled for them. That means that only simple tools like GNU utilities were available. I couldn’t find powerhouses like ImageMagick. Git Bash was quite popular but honestly didn’t cut it for me. As a result, my solution was even more convoluted. I had a virtual machine running a lightweight Linux distro and had to painfully transfer files back and forth between my host system and Linux guest. And no, shared folders don’t count as a solution because the probability of them working were the same as winning the lottery. And I’d think you’d be insane to suggest dual-booting as a solution.

At the dawn of Windows 10, Microsoft came up with a solution that would actually steal some users from the Linux fanbase. Windows Subsystem for Linux allowed to not only run a complete Linux distro that was perfectly integrated with your Windows install and files, but was binary compatible with ELF. This means that I could bring in everything that I loved using APT and manipulate files that were directly on my Windows partition. In typical Microsoft fashion, the name makes it hard to understand what WSL is supposed to imply.

Of course, Microsoft didn’t pair the very convenient Windows Subsystem for Linux with a nice terminal and was still stuck with the ancient cmd.exe (Command Prompt). Yes, I know there’s a Terminal app by Microsoft themselves now, but that doesn’t cut it either. It only just looks a bit prettier.

ConEmu brings some very powerful terminal features to Windows with all the bells and whistles you’d except from a fancy emulator. A showcase of WSL running on Windows doing typical Linux things.

ConEmu was salvation for me bringing an extremely powerful terminal emulator into my arsenal. It made switching between shells like Windows Batch, PowerShell and WSL a breeze. The most brilliant part is not that only support tabs, but also tiling. The icing on the cake however is the ability to be able to start a terminal within the context menu of the Explorer file manager and bring straight into that directory. Just like most desktop environments on Linux. It’s really hard to expand on this because I’m still trying to navigate my way around ConEmu; I’ll grudgingly admit that configuring it is a bit of a pain.

I can’t leave without mentioning the legendary PuTTY, an everything including the kitchen sink client that brought SSH on Windows way before anyone else.

I’m a ricing ambassador. Pimp my desktop.

Rainmeter, Windhawk, /r/desktops, DeviantArt

Alright, so I frequent the /r/unixporn subreddit quite often, and can’t help but feel jealousy, nay envy when I see these stunning desktop screenshots. I’m so jealous in fact that I’d threw a slur into the customization concept calling it ricing. This is just something that is impossible to replicate on Windows, so these suggestions are just a best attempt, and will admittedly only get you a part of the way there.

Rainmeter brings gadgets to your Windows desktop mainly with monitors of your system vitals like CPU usage and network activity but also custom UI, shortcuts and all sorts of widgets. The best part? It’s just as complicated to setup as your favourite Linux desktop environment with scattered .ini files and a bunch of plugins wrapped in .dll libraries. This will keep you very busy as you get everything just right and have all the pixels align as beautifully as the stars. I personally see it as conky on steroids but it’s so much more bringing a sense of life to your desktop. See the community showcase for what creative people have been able to make.

A really well pimped-up Windows desktop with Rainmeter and a few other UI tweaks. Image courtesy of an XDA blogger.

With Windows 11, Microsoft really nerfed UI customization to the point that the taskbar has become fixed to the bottom of the screen. A staple that started with Windows 95 was gone. The start menu layout wasn’t yours anymore and the only colour schemes are light and dark. Even macOS lets you customize the accent colour of your UI. This is where Windhawk comes in, a utility that brings an endless series of plugins to really tune your UI to your liking. From adjusting the size and spacing of the taskbar icons to restoring the login and logout sounds. I can’t say that this will bring a personal touch to your system, but it will allow to adjust and remove many of the idiosyncrasies that Windows, especially version 11, has brought to life.

There’s a few tools that will allow you to do some more visual customization but none of the really cut it. I’m mentioning them for completeness. Such as WindowsBlinds and various tools and themes that can be found on DeviantArt, notably the deviant niivu. For inspiration, I totally recommend taking a look at what some of the artists have been able to do at /r/desktops.

Conclusion.

Hyprland is a reminder for me of how beautiful a desktop could look. In my opinion, probably the most attractive window manager currently available on Linux. Video courtesy of the Hyprland official website.

In this post, I’ll admit that I really shat on Linux, and had much of sarcastic tone, but in the real world, there’s some software that I just can’t live without and things like Wine and VMs didn’t heal my melancholic longing. However, with Linux, even the sky wasn’t the limit and still run Linux in VMs just to catch up on what I’ve been missing. For example, the nascent Hyprland animated tiling WM seen above was a stark reminder of how beautiful a computer desktop could look like. Linux is like that unruly son of yours, so annoying, but you’d kill anyone who’d try to take him away from you.

The Oatmeal brilliantly explains how to fix a Linux computer.

I know some people will resent me a little, and probably get a bit defensive. And the war is still on. For those who might think that I was a n00b who gave up too quickly, I was running the platform full-time for several years and have a Debian server under my couch. While the official statistics hang around 1% of market share, I believe that within the tech community this number is much higher. Windows and macOS are not heaven either but feel like the least worst choice. Keep this in mind, even Torvalds thinks that Linux desktop still sucks. And Brian Lunduke, famed for previously hosting the Linux Action Show podcast and a passionate Linux ambassador, pokes fun at this every year.

Unfortunately, in the real world, there’s just things that don’t work. It’s been so many years that I’ve left and the honeymoon phase is nothing but a distant memory. When I first tried an Ubuntu 8.10 live CD when I was a teenager, I was just so impressed with how flexible everything was. Back then, I had so much free time, and would gladly spend an entire weekend tweaking the font-hinting to look just right. For the past few years now, my computer has just become a tool to get my job done, and the question of operating system choice boils down to pragmatism.

LAN Party Games that Run on a Potato and Any Platform

When I picture a typical land party, I imagine a bunch of passionate geek gamers bringing in their massive desktop weapons or laptop desktop replacements. Machines with powerful GPUs enough to run NASA spacecraft and cost as much as one.

An AI-generated image of a LAN Party on the Highway

However, what if your peers only have modest machines with an integrated GPU? Essentially, a 'normal' laptop. Imagine hosting a party with those, no one will be able to run these modern demanding games and no one will be enjoying the slideshow and crashes in their games.

So I'm including here a bunch of games that can run on a potato but still provide a fun experience without the need of a 20-pound computer. Of course, no one is going to be wowed by the presentation, but fun will ensue anyways.

I came up with a few arbitrary criteria that these games should have. First, the game must be less than 25$ CAD and easy to procure online. It must run on my mule netbook Latitude 3190 that only has an Intel UHD Graphics 600 as the iGPU reasonably well and be playable. Also, it needs to run on Windows, macOS and Linux either natively or via some compatibility layer like Wine or Proton.

Finally, I won't try to make the list exhaustive, however, I do want to try and make some variety with some genres. Not every party game needs to be a first person shooter. One more rule is that I will only include one game per genre. But, I will leave a list of games that are similar without description.

Quake Live - First Person Shooter

Classic FPS arena shooters games I find to be an enjoyable because of how easy and accessible they are. No fiddly mechanics or complicated rules. However, it still comes with a ton of customization options and almost a hundred maps. Several games modes like Free-for-All and Capture-The-Flag will keep the replayability high. A game that will easily take over even the longest marathon LAN parties.

It is available on Steam for 10.99$ CAD and I've been able to run it even on my backup 10 year old desktop that runs Linux through Valve's Proton.

Similar Games: Counter-Strike, Xonotic, Cube 2: Sauerbraten, Red Eclipse, Warsow, World of Padman, Urban Terror, Halo CE

Live for Speed - Racing Simulator

I've never been to a session where people were playing racing games, apparently the genre isn't popular with the typical comic-book geek. However, they provide a very difficult challenge of keeping a car on the road and for some hilarity on turn one T1 where everything goes wrong.

Live for Speed has been in development for over 20 years and the developer has maintained its modest graphical style so it runs even on lower-spec systems Scawen even tests that his game runs on Wine.

While it works pretty well with a mouse and keyboard, a gamepad is recommended for more precise control.

LFS comes free as demo version which includes, in my opinion, the best track in the game, Blackwood, and two very well-balanced road cars. The full game is a bit expensive at ₤36 but I'm including it here because the demo has enough content to keep the fun going for hours.

Similar Games: Speed Dreams, rFactor 1

0 A.D. - Real-Time Strategy

I know almost nothing about Real-Time Strategy games because I have no idea how to play them. However, I know that they are extremely popular, especially in Asia. Player of these types of games are extremely competitive and parties all over the world are hosted just to fight for the win.

Unfortunately, I don't play RTS games but I totally understand the appeal so my experience is a bit shallow and heavily relied on research to find some of the best games.

0 A.D. is completely open-source and free, and runs on multiple platforms including Windows, macOS and Linux. Amazingly, it is still being developed to this day.

Similar Games: Warzone 2100, League of Legends, Dota 2, StarCraft, Age of Empires 2, Brood War

Tabletop Simulator - Board Games

Board games can be a fun way to spend some quality time with friends but you need the actual set. Also, you can't play with people across the world. This is where Tabletop Simulator comes in, a physics sandbox designed to emulate board games.

The game has so much expandability with a massive repository on Steam's Workshop so you'll be hard pressed to not find a board game that you and your friends will like. Remember, however, it is up to you to implement the rules and TTS doesn't have an engine that keeps track of the rules. So that means, you can flip the board out of anger with no consequence.

Tabletop Simulator sells at 21.99$ CAD on Steam but you can buy four copies for 66.49$ CAD. It runs natively on all three major platforms.

Similar Games: Zillion of Games 2

Garry's Mod - Physics Sandbox

What happens when you take a masterpiece game like Half-Life and remove all the rules and story from it. You end up with an incredibly entertaining sandbox where you can do whatever you want.

This is the kind of game where you create your own fun whether you want to blow things up, make a Rube Goldberg machine or set fire to wooden structures. Of course, it comes with full Steam Workshop support where you can find thousands of props, maps and weapons limiting things to only your imagination.

Garry's Mod is available on Steam for 10.99$ though I also recommend getting Counter-Strike Source along with it because some of the props and addons need them. It runs natively on Windows, macOS and Linux.

Similar Games: Minecraft

open.mp (GTA: San Andreas) - Open-World

Grant Theft Auto, for those who lived under a rock, is a open-world game that combines multiple elements from different genres such as FPS, beat-em-up and driving. Essentially, you're a criminal that is yielded weapons and have the ability to steal cars and drive. Most people play in a sandbox mode where they do whatever they want such as wrecking havoc in the city while there is also a story mode which follows an action-adventure style playing essentially as a criminal.

While GTA V is one most of the popular multiplayer games according to the Steam statistics, it still needs a pretty decent machine to run. However, GTA multiplayer experiences did exist before for San Andreas with the SA:MP mod. The mod was left stagnant eventually but fortunately a group of open-source developers came up with open.mp as a drop-in replacement to continue these tantalizing multiplayer experiences.

Unfortunately, San Andreas isn't available through the normal means anymore so you either need to buy a physical copy off eBay or get it through other means. It runs well under Wine on macOS and Linux. In fact, the game is so modest in it's requirements that there are versions for mobile.

Alternatives: Midtown Madness 2

RetroArch Netplay - Classic Games

For your classic gaming fix, you can still enjoy an amazing multiplayer experience with friends. And since emulators run classic systems, you don't have to worry about performance. There's a huge selection of great games for various consoles. I'm plugging in my TopRoms Collection to get you started.

RetroArch and other emulators like Dolphin have made it extremely easy to set up Netplay, a multiplayer program for emulators, as easy as picking a room from a lobby interface just like many other multiplayer games. This used to be incredibly complicated but now its headache free.

The emulator is available here for free and it's fully open-source. Not only does it run on Windows, macOS and Linux but also mobile platforms like Android and dozens of other systems.

Armagetron Advanced - Snake Game

What happens when you take Tron and turn into a fast-paced arcade snake game? You get Armagetron Advanced, where you play in a 3D arena driving futuristic bicycles leave a trail of walls behind you. Try to trap your opponents into them and don't crash into yours or that of others.

There's not much to say about the game due to its simplicity. It comes with excellent netcode so it will run even on poor networks. The game is open-source and free, running on all three major platforms.

OpenRCT2 - Tycoon

This is a game that has a special place in my heart mostly due to the nostalgia factor. However, building a theme park is quite an enjoyable experience for me. There are so many types of props that you can make your park as fanciful or simple as you want.

OpenRCT2 is a reimplementation of RollerCoaster Tycoon 2 with multi-platform support, increased stability and a neat multiplayer feature.

In order to run OpenRCT2, you need a copy of the original game that you can get from Steam for 10.99$ or DRM-free from GOG for 8.13$. Of course, it runs on all three major platforms.

Alternatives: OpenTTD

YSFlight - Flight and Combat Simulator

Flight simulators are typically games that need a ton of horsepower to run due to their amazing graphics and complex and realistic gameplay. However, one developer, Soji Yamakawa, in the very late 90s, thought that there should be something more accessible.

Enter YSFlight, a combat flight simulator that has very simple graphics and sound but still provides the same kind of fun of flying in the air in addition to its combat mechanics. Setup is minimal, simply requiring you to pick your plane and map, and you’re good to go. It will also recognize your joystick quite quickly too!

YSFlight is available for all three major platforms and has been recently open-sourced. You can get many addons from here.

Alternatives: FlightGear, IL-2, Falcon

OpenLieroX - Artillery

Imagine the Worms game, but in real-time. This is what you get, OpenLieroX. It is based on the original Liero game but with a ton of extra maps and weapons.

Dig your way through a sand trap or use your weapons to make a big opening with a bomb explosion. Frag the other players in the free-for-all mode or play in teams. It is fun that will last for a really long time.

OpenLieroX is open-source and free, running on all three major platforms.

Alternatives: Teeworlds, Warmux, Worms Series

tetr.io - Falling Puzzle Game

I still have memories of the flash game Tetris Friends, an official version of the game with multiplayer support and a ton of single-player challenges. The controls were very solid generating some very exhilarating and exciting gameplay. Unfortunately, a few years ago, it was shut down.

The spiritual resurrection came out a few years ago as tetr.io bringing back essentially most of the gameplay of the defunct Tetris Friends. The presentation is excellent with your choice of relaxing or intense music and so much customization. It features excellent single player modes that keep track of your progress while also allowing you playing the game with other people on the Internet. The dynamics follow the official Tetris guidelines.

Tetr.io runs on the browser though there is a desktop version that again, runs on all major platforms.

Alternative: A List of a ton of Tetris Clones

Conclusion

So there you have it, a list of games to consider for your next friendly LAN party. However, since these games are not demanding, your party room won't turn into a sauna and people can bring in their regular laptops with the platform of their choice.

I tested all the games on my mule that I mentioned earlier. It runs a derivative of Arch Linux and was able to play all the games on it pretty smoothly. On my actually daily driver, which still has an integrated GPU, it doesn't break a sweat.

I hope you enjoyed this list and inspired you to run your own casual people friendly LAN party! If you have some suggestions of your own, feel free to leave a comment below and share with the community!

Why you shouldn't start a blog

So you want to get onto the blogging train? Thinking what lies ahead is a replacement for your boring office job? We all have strong delusions that easy money is just around the corner as a side gig. However, anything that starts as fun becomes a job when you get onto the treadmill.

My blog started around April 2017, having no idea what to expect. My only real goal was expressing myself and talking about subjects that I’m passionate about. I broke all the rules. First, I didn’t pick a niche that would narrow my topics. Second, I didn’t give a crap about SEO and at the time of starting, I didn’t even know what it entailed. Third, I never put ads, affiliates or sponsorships on my blog. I do have a ‘donate’ button on the side somewhere, but no one has ever clicked it.

I get a decent amount of readers that I want to please and projects that I’m working on. Some of my posts have gone viral I’ll admit and I get a good volume of emails about my blog post topics or projects. I’m making an impact on some people apparently, but I’m not making money. And I don't care.

This blog for me was mostly about expressing my freedom. I bravely talked about elements of my personal life, controversial topics and subjects that no one cared about. I knew that someone might read it, but probably a few people at most. With where I am right now, I’m pretty content with what my website has become. It has become the portfolio that I show off to those who want me to get onboard their team.

Reasons not to blog

Throughout the past few years, I’ve been teaching people how to start and write blogs, what platforms to pick and how to maintain a good writing style and most importantly practice. However, I noticed that people’s intentions seemed inadequate and honestly, unrealistic. I started to collect their ideas and putting the in the worst reasons to start a blog:

Writing for Popularity

I know it’s really tantalizing to become famous and be known in various communities driving recognition for yourself. However, keep in mind you’re competing with millions of blogs, with people who have the same desire for notoriety. Every day, someone pushes the WordPress button thinking that have found a topic so narrow that no one has ever discussed it before. However, unless you’re a university researcher who is used to searching for very particular studies, an average search engine user is probably not going to even find your blog. You might be on page five of Google search results, but do you really think that people will go that far to find your supposed gem?

It is very important to write for your audience no doubt, but getting so specific will turn off many people off because it just doesn’t feel right to read. You’ll be working hard coming up with clickbait titles but it will cause your visitors to bounce back very quickly as the article doesn’t fulfill the promises that your title made. Those so called top ten lists might make for a lot of clicks, but people will skip headline to headline and promptly forgot everything you wrote. Even memorable images won’t stay in their head.

Writing for Search Engines

Search Engine Optimization is a hotly debated subject within the blogging community. The perfect storm of keywords, headers and design choices should make your post be the first one on top of search results. However, it probably won’t and consider how unlikely someone is going to be searching for “motherly tips to deal with pets during the pandemic” rather than “covid symptoms”.

Again, like I said before, write to entice and engage your readers. Keep them in as you get them interested into subjects you’re passionate about. Compose for them because they should be your number one priority. The ‘customer is always right’ philosophy really fits in well here.

Keep in mind that getting people visiting your site is only a small part of the endeavour. You want them to read what you want to say and come back over and over again. Give them a good reason to stay and participate in your discussions.

Think about it, who’s going to read your posts? A robot or a person?

Writing for Money

This is many of my students dream, someone quit their boring white collar job for miraculously making 100k$+ per year income. I’ll admit that I know some people who have done it but they’re very few. As with smartphone apps, clothing products and what not, there’s a huge luck factor and survivorship bias that comes into play.

You’ll likely need to sell more than just your blog to make some acceptable amount of money, assuming it has a good value proposition. These can include things like books, swag and other material that is actually tangible. It takes effort (and money) to get things like this going and it’s a risk anyways.

Things like ads, sponsorships and affiliates will actually end up annoying your readers. Unless you have something as popular as Facebook, no one is going to click on your ads. Keep in mind for things like technical audiences, they likely already have an adblockers that even strips referral URLs.

Passion at Your Pace

If you do things at your own pace, you’ll be avoiding the content treadmill that many prolific content creators suffer from and complain about. You have to be really consistent with your product and constantly produce articles. Your hobby will essentially become a job and you might even miss your previous white collar job.

We all have something to say whether it’s mundane, important or just plain funny. Let your blog be the avenue to self-expression and discuss what’s on your mind. After all, shouldn’t everything be done with passion and love rather rather than regurgitating the same stuff that everyone else is. Perhaps, for me, as it is for many other small blogs, it’s a way to express your freedom and talk to your audience no matter how small it is.

By forgetting all the weak ambitions above, you might find yourself getting what you’ve been dreaming about!

Something to think about and reflect on.

Healing the wounds from Sonic Origins

Sonic Origins was shaping up to become the definitive way to play our favourite classics from the Genesis era. The official trailer demoed tantalizing animated cutscenes amidst footage of the remasters running in beautiful widescreen at 60 fps. We fell for it.

We obsessive Sonic fans waited until midnight of Sonic’s 31st anniversary (the release date) to grab a downloadable copy of this new compilation. However, what was supposed to be a sleepless night of a fan’s wet dream slowly became a bad trip of a nightmare.

Most reviewers and YouTubers were left with mixed feelings unimpressed with the game’s lack of polish. Veteran Sonic players saw much more subtle flaws that brought the game further away from what was supposed to be a compilation holy grail.

I don’t need to go into details, but most of us were left with sour taste from Sonic Origins feeling like we wasted 60$. The bugs, missing details, inaccurate physics and of course the butchered prototype tracks. It made us so angry and hurt our feelings. We were left with many painful cuts and bruises.

Sonic and Amy inflicted with wounds and bleeding. From Tumbler Blogger *chinchilla*

Many have tried to patch the holes in Sonic Origins but eventually realizing that it’s not moddable enough to fix the papercuts. Sega got the sale figures they wanted so they have no motivation to correct the many bugs in the game. Stealth from Headcannon revealed that Sega sent them into development hell.

Fortunately, fan gamers have already built remasters which fill in the gap quite nicely. You can still enjoy these games in a more polished and modern format without all the oddities found in Sega’s rush job. These are the treatments to your wounds and the definitive way play to these games in widescreen, at 60 fps and with drop dash.

If you really liked the animated cutscenes, you can still watch these fantastic animations online from beginning to end. And don’t worry, you can find much more concepts, drawings, manuals, interviews and music than the tiny sample of bonuses that Origins included over at Sonic Retro.

Of course, if you can’t get enough of these platformers than you should take a look at the matchless spiritual successor made by Christian Whitehead et al. Sonic Mania

I’ve resurrected my Flight Simulator 2004 (FS9) install!

I purchased a large collection of addons back in 2009-2015 for Microsoft Flight Simulator 2004 of a large variety and with much money. When FSX was released, all those addons were not compatible with it and became obsolete. Back then, FSX required very powerful computers and the poor performance made me return back to FS2004.

Later on, Lockheed-Martin picked up from where the ESP platform was left from Microsoft and released newer and improved versions as Prepar3d. The software was continuously updated breaking the addons that were purchased for the simulator.

Whenever an upgrade was released for the addons, developers often made users pay an upgrade fee. This is assuming that the addons are not abandoned by the developer.

I eventually moved on to X-Plane 11 by Laminar Research at the time where the addon market for it was starting to boom. Many simulations were very in-depth, study-level and so realistic that even pilots could use it for training. I purchased a couple addons for it. I was confident that I didn’t need my old sim anymore and deleted all my installers for FS2004 mods. My backup hard-drive failed and lost everything. I wasn’t upset because I thought I would only play X-Plane from now on.

When Flight Simulator (2020) came out, it revolutionized the way scenery was generated using photogrammetry and satellite imagery to generate a world so accurate that you could see your house in the game. However, this game is still in it’s infancy without a proper SDK. Hardly any serious addons have been release for it.

I realized that I was stuck with a bunch of addons purchased a while ago that I wasn’t using anymore. A sense of guilt ran through me because I felt that I spent money on nothing. I didn’t want to keep spending so much money (addons are getting more expensive these days) every time I upgraded. Therefore, this year, I decided to resurrect FS2004 and get all my addons back. It wasn’t that easy.

Screenshots

Finally! I’ve managed to resurrect most of my FS9 addons on Windows 10. The reason I did this was because I bought so many addons for FS9 back in 2009-2015 and I feel like I was putting them to waste if I didn’t use them at all. It took me two days to get most of my addons installed. I still have more to go. It's about 55 GB so far.

This time, I made backups for all the installers and keys on OneDrive and on an external hard drive. Despite all of this, I figure some addons are going to be eventually out of date.

Difficulty of Installation

Here’s what I discovered installing such an ancient flight simulator on a modern system:

  • Most FS9 products disappeared around 2016 from stores.

  • Addons with plain and simple installers that don’t phone home still work.

  • Flight1 Wrapper doesn’t always work with Windows 10. This is a known issue. Therefore, I’ve lost some addons.

  • Some vendors don’t provide downloads for legacy products anymore.

  • I had to contact some developers to get the legacy installers.

  • Manually generated keys are not done by the developers anymore.

  • Many products aren’t supported anymore (this is understandable).

  • Some activation servers are no longer online.

Due to the above, I had to resort to piracy to use products that I actually bought. I had to go through shady websites often in languages that I don’t understand. I sought refuse with VMWare, uBlock Origin, Sandboxie and VirusTotal to hopefully catch any malicious software. It made me reflect our reliance on online services these days. Once they’re gone we lose the software and our data.

What I miss from FS9:

  • 2D panels which are really easy to read and navigate through. They look ugly compared to virtual cockpits but they’re so much more practical and pragmatic.

  • At this point, after more than 20 years of hardware evolution, frame rate is incredibly high. I can run it at 4K at 60 fps all the time in any scenario.

  • Excellent and busy AI traffic with the proper addons. Easy to spot with labels above them.

  • Probably the simulator with the most freeware addons.

  • The collection of payware addons is much more varied, you can essentially find scenery for any location on the planet and a huge variety of obscure planes.

  • You can have windows of other views and put them on a separate screen.

  • You can have windows of some gauges and put them on a separate screen.

  • No VAS issues. Still need a patch to increase it to 4GB because by default, with more demanding addons, the sim still crashes.

  • Flight Path view and Replay.

  • Planes for early history are there such as the Wright Flyer.

  • Flight Lesson material is in depth and well documented.

  • Incredibly fast load times and startup.

  • Meigs Field

  • The graphics look way more natural than modern FSX and F3D. I find that the addons for the latter tend to look more cartoony and too vibrant.

What I don’t miss from FS9:

  • Gauges refresh rate is terrible, especially compared to X-Plane’s ultra-smooth panels. It’s even worse in VC where some planes where the refresh rate is probably 2-4 FPS.

  • No good camera tool for moving around and effects. There’s only F1View and Active Camera but they leave a lot to be desired.

  • Flight Dynamics are absolutely terrible. It feels like you’re flying on rails and turbulence doesn’t do much.

  • The virtual cockpits look so bad. Almost everything is 2D and you can really tell.

  • So many separate executables for load management and other features. They’re integrated into the sim in new simulators.

  • Comparing to the amazing scenery from MSFS, FS2004 looks extremely dated and horrible. Autogen is utterly terrible. Terrain resolution leaves so much to be desired. I can’t believe one pixel is used for 4 meters squared. Scenery drawn further away is blurry mess and mesh looks terrible.

  • Mesh is so low resolution outside of the US. Addons that add extra resolution are buggy because of improper airport altitudes and flat airports.

  • Almost all decent scenery is payware.

  • Again, it’s ancient software now.

  • Compared to modern addons, system depth isn’t that deep.

  • Need an external tool for flight planning. Forget about SID and STARS with the default one. I use SimBrief as an alternative.

  • The incredibly invasive anti-piracy mechanisms. Some they even detect false positives and do something like delete folders in your FS9 install or delete the addon. I had to use virtual machines to test some of them. I’ll leave this detailed in another post soon.

  • Need to run as administrator for most addons to work.

  • No HDPI support. Everything is tiny.

  • Selecting aircraft don’t always work

  • Default ATC is useless. (I mean, it still is in X-Plane 11 and MSFS2020.

  • The game is unstable and needs constant restarting.

After being spoiled by X-Plane and even more with MSFS, the FS9 graphics are really really starting to look dated. 

Conclusion

It feels like quite an achievement to get all this running and definitely worth the time. I now have access to most of the software that I purchased and learned to love in the past. Looks like this will keep me busy for a while.

I still play and enjoy X-Plane and MSFS and have a collection of addons for them too. I don’t believe that you should pick one simulator and live with it. There’s nothing wrong with having multiple ones as long as you have the disk space!

Recommended Addons

  • Level-D Simulations - The 767: This is a good balance between a study level and a casual simulation. Very easy to learn with nice documentation and example flights. Quite old but a classic.

  • iFly Jets - 737NG and 747: The old PMDG airliners have been discontinued. This is a good replacement and up-to-par with the current PMDG simulations.

  • Leonardo - Fly The Maddog SP2: Probably one of the most complex simulations for FS2004. It is a discontinued but if you look hard enough "online" you'll find it.

  • PMDG - MD-11: This is probably my favourite airliner simulation. You can find DVD of it on eBay but also "online". PMDG discontinued it because apparently, it didn't sell really well. I call bullshit on this and believe that it is due to a developer debacle. The main developer (Lefteris Kalamaras) of the plane left and they couldn't support it anymore. Here’s some help.

  • SSTSIM - CONCORDE: Very detailed Concorde with a very immersive feel. Simulates the majority of systems but not all of them. This is more in-depth than the PSS one.

  • Aerosoft - Piper Cheyenne: A really in-depth dual turboprop simulation.

  • RealAir: Citabria/SF-260 and Spitfire: Simple planes but very realistic flight dynamics. Plane rolls-over in stall and probably the only simulation that I've tried that simulates sideslips.

  • VRS - F/A-18E Superbug: If you ask the developer very nicely, you will get a copy for FS9. This is the most in-depth military aircraft even more than the DCS version.

  • PILOTS - FS Global Real Weather: This is a great replacement to ActiveSky Evolution. It's still supported and works with FS2004.

  • Matthias Neusinger - FS Recorder: A million times between than the integrated replay in FS9. Much smoother.

  • Pablo Diaz - HDEv2: This is freeware, you can find it on AVSIM. It enhances the sky colours and clouds dramatically. I find it to be less cartoonish and subtle than REX.

  • FSAddon - Glacier Bay Alaska/Canada: Another freeware that you can find on AVSIM. It replaces a good portion of Alaska and Canada with more detailed mesh, textures and landclass.

  • Flight One Software - Ultimate Traffic: My favourite AI traffic enhancement. I find it stable, provides good density and good performance. There are many freeware alternatives on the Internet.

  • Flight One Software - Ground Environment Professional: Replacement ground textures. Looks much better than the default but it won't work around the terrible ground resolution in FS9.

  • Flight One Software - Ultimate Terrain: Highly improved landclass, rivers, roads, etc for Alaska, Canada, USA and Europe.