Why does Linux freeze under heavy I/O loads? This doesn't happen in Windows

Why does Linux freeze under heavy I/O loads? This doesn't happen in Windows.

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Stop watching loli porn and l33tfags will finally stop tormenting your machine

>t. one of 'em

Perhaps because the hardware you are using and the software you have installed are not optimized like they should be.
This could be caused by shitty software or your own ignorance of the hardware you have and how to use it to its full potential.
You should hire a professional to help you with this.

Leroleroperopupus

giwtwm

LOL Good one. Windows is unusable for 45 minutes after a cold boot because of heavy i/o.
Do wintoddlers really think GNU+Linux users prefer it because they haven't tried windows yet?

NakaNO

go back

ohhh yeahh droppin heavy I/O loads

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you haven't used windows at all

Your machine is trash

no, he is correct. windows boots up really quickly because it doesnt actually do much during boot, it does it all in the background after it starts.
go and freshly install windows on a laptop and try to use it immediately after it's finished. then, leave it in for a day or two to finish setting up and installing updates now cold boot it and try to use it immediately. in both situations you'll have an awful experience.

bonus points, get a lightly scratched CD and insert it into your DVD drive. open windows explorer and attempt to open the CD. watch and your entire computer is brought to it's knees by a spinning plastic disc.

t. windows sysadmin for like 11 years, recently switched to linux at home a few years ago. linux doesn't have these problems.

god I wanna smell her feet and lick her CUNNY...

I don't have this problem on my desktop nor my laptop when I cold boot any one of them. They both boot fast to the desktop. I turned off fast startup day one on my desktop (because I dual boot) and I always cold boot the desktop and the laptop has it on because it's just faster to get to the desktop.

imagine the footjobs

kys pedofags

its exponentially more noticable on lower spec hardware, although i recently insteadd win10 onto an xps13 2021 and it also has this issue before any optimisation

what is likely the case is after you first installed windows, you went out of your way to tweak settings to remove most of the issues you get OOB, and youve since forgotten what they were like. most people i talk to about windows issues are like this.

i3-1115G4, some SSD (don't know if it's sata or nvme) and Windows 11 Pro on the Laptop
i7 7700K, some Sata 3 SSD and Windows 10 Pro on the Desktop
I really don't like reinstalling and tweaking my OS because if it works it works.

ToT

I prefer little boys, OP.

You're using a throughput-focused instead of latency-focused scheduler. Either switch schedulers or just have an RPi as a secondary shitposting machine while your work rig cranks through a heavy compute job.