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Due to increasing concerns over cyberattacks and malware, India's Defence Ministry has decided to replace Microsoft's OS with a locally made Ubuntu fork named Maya (meaning 'deception' in Sanskrit). Maya will have an interface similar to Windows to ease the transition, and an end-point detection and protection system called Chakravyuh. The three armed services are also expected to follow suit, with the Navy already having cleared the OS for deployment.

The Indian government has long had a policy to transfer all government systems to open-source software, with the Railways and the Bombay Stock Exchange having switched to Red Hat and educational institutions using distributions such as Debian-based BOSS and Ubuntu-based KITE.

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[-] user224@lemmy.sdf.org 12 points 1 year ago

I don't like Windows either, but my experience with 11 was not as bad. I ran it on now dead 16 year old laptop (Compal FL90). It worked better than Windows 10, although it's possible that it was old enough to not support some background services. I also disabled BITS and SuperFetch which gave it a huge boost.

But compared to Linux Mint 20.3, Windows 8.1 or the officially supported Windows XP, that was a snail.

this post was submitted on 09 Aug 2023
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