• parzival@lemmy.org
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    3 days ago

    the problem is that specifically in Windows 11, it isn’t booted up when the login is shown, as integral processes aren’t started. Some of these include: the start menu, the search menu, file explorer, and many other background processes

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Yeah, I’d consider time from boot to login prompt to be a useless metric. You could design an OS to show a prompt before anything else to “win” this pointless race.

      Boot to usable is the only one that makes sense.

      Ok, one case where boot to login is useful: you want to boot up and walk away for a bit, so less waiting for a login means you can login before walking away. Though, personally, I find RAM training takes a long time these days if you’re not waking from suspend, so still think boot to login is moot.

      • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        This is important to me. More than “time until login” I’d prefer “time until queue”. I want to login before walking away because I want to open certain programs. So if an OS allows me to tell it “after you boot up, open these 3 programs” but hasn’t completely booted up, I would prefer it to one that only lets you open programs once it has booted.

        And no, configuring so it opens the same programs at startup doesn’t count. I wanna choose every time I turn on the computer.

        • parzival@lemmy.org
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          3 days ago

          you could almost certainly do this with grub somehow, but yeah I see your point