Comment by washadjeffmad
4 years ago
> working OS without a hassle
I can't help but think you meant, "I've accepted there's no real way to salvage and diagnose my computer when it breaks so reformatting it has become second nature. I always keep an up to date Win10 install USB ready, and I even have a second hard drive that I keep all my files on."
With Macs, you have to put up with MacOS and Apple (one big premium is lack of choice). It's also not that easy to self-administrate without MDM, and software options are relatively limited if you come from either Linux or Windows.
Oh come on stop spreading the Windows 98 old stories. Windows 10 is a piece of crap spyware but it is stable.
We have >8K active Win10 workstations on our domain.
I wish you weren't wrong.
I'm a software dev but since we're only 2 techies at work I also maintain about 40 Windows PC, 3 Hyper-V hypervisors (with something like half a dozen Windows server, the rest are Linuxes) and the printers.
If Windows 10 was unstable I should be swamped. But I spend more than 90% of my time on software dev.
And the machines are not new with fresh installs, I all migrated them manually from Windows 7.
They completely broke Alt-Tab in 20H2 so no, it's not.
The unspoken rule didn't change because it's Windows 10: never install a fresh release of an OS right away (I'm still on 20H1). And judging by the comments I read here it's true for MacOS too.
FWIW I switched from XP to Vista 1 or 1.5 year after its release date. It has been a great OS for me, I never had a problem with it (except that it's then they started with the bullshit telemetry).
Of course YMMV, but since late Vista stability isn't a major issue anymore.
Never reinstalled Windows unintentionally at least for the part 10 years.
> software options are relatively limited
When was the last time you used macOS? I see the options limited on Windows rather and even moreso on Linux.