Comment by the__alchemist
1 day ago
Out of the loop: Why is Windows 11 discussion trending over the past few months? It was released 4 years ago, and the most notable changes from the previous edition are a tabbed file browser, and the taskbar icons are now in the middle.
Probably because people are being forced out of their Windows 10 systems, and onto an unwanted Windows 11.
Also, you seem to skip other notable changes like enforced spam and enforced Copilot and enforced online registration.
I see a Copilot icon in the sys try I didn't put there and is unwelcome, but haven't clicked it. Worrying.
As the other commenter said win10 went out of support and only recently ~2 months ago the company I work for migrated to win11, I think now all the people that do not want to use win11 are forced to use it and complain
Ah thank you! That explains it.
Windows 10 just stopped getting security updates some weeks ago. So people that had been sticking with 10 are now considering 11.
You can still get security updated by enrolling in the Extended Support branch. Did it in a relative's computer and it seems it will get security updates for at least an extra year, with the advantage it won't get any feature updates too (a really nice bonus IMO).
Because Windows 10 is now end-of-life. Previously, everyone who cared simply stayed on Windows 10.
I assumed it was because windows 10 went out of support a few months ago
Windows 11 doesn't support Intel CPUs older than 8th gens. Linux is no longer an alternative, it's a lifeline for many old yet very capable machines.
What is Microsoft trying to do by ending Windows 10 support?
I believe it does, but only from a clean install, rather than an in-place upgrade; I ran into this a few years ago.
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Multiple reasons : IA pushback, better gaming experience, Linux becoming more and more mainstream with distro like Bazzite and CachyOS.
Taskbar icons in the middle are a symbol of general direction Windows is going towards. It's the tipping point where we say enough is enough. We're tired of anti-consumer changes. It's different from Vista or 8 which failed despite MS believing in it. This time MS gives us shit and they know it and they don't care. Microsoft doesn't hold the entire PC OS market hostage like it was the case only ten years ago, and if your use case is development + video games + porn, then Linux is a viable option, which definitely wasn't the case ten years ago.