Comment by jama211

7 days ago

I feel the average HN user though might be a bad representation of the general population. Personally I prefer the aesthetic of windows 11 over 7, it’s about the ONLY thing I prefer about windows 11, but windows 7 looks extremely dated to me now.

That is, until you try to use windows 11. And it gives you bing results instead of the option in control panel you want, even though you spelled it exactly.

  • I've never had this happen to me and I've daily driven Windows 11 for some years now. Can you give an example?

  • It’s like you didn’t read the rest of my comment. However I can’t confirm. I wack that windows key on my keyboard and start typing all the time and can’t remember it ever opening the wrong thing.

I'd prefer Windows 2000, myself. Relatively light weight, no bling or junk in the UI. Windows XP was okay, but the default UI looked like a toy. I know you can turn it off, but most people didn't. We won't mention Vista...

i don't have a w11 supported machine, but when I see the OS in videos or screenshots, I always thought it looks surprisingly pleasant and fresh, compared to 10. Really miss Vista though, that one was amazing visually.

  • You probably do, I thought I didn’t but if you just disable the warning about TPM 2.0 with a simple command it lets you install it just fine. Had no problems for years now.

Have you ever used Windows 8.1? With a classic start button app the UI layout is the good Windows 7 one with the "modern" Windows appearance.

  • In terms of functionality, 8.1 isn't bad but I can't stand the flat square theme that could've dropped straight out of the DOS era. It's so ugly.

    I understand why Aero didn't continue on in its Vista/7 form, but Metro swung way too far in the other direction. The Fluent look used by Windows 11 is a nice middleground that I wish 8, 8.1, and 10 could've adopted instead. Too bad the rest of 11 sucks.

  • Of course, it was fine. I was real glad they removed the full screen start menu at the time. I still prefer the look of 11.

>but windows 7 looks extremely dated to me now.

This is a highly subjective thing.

  • This can be a relevant reminder at times, but based on their phrasing, I think they’re aware:

    > Personally I prefer […] looks extremely dated to me now.

    Compare to the GP comment, for instance, where this may still be the case but is less clear from phrasing:

    > They're just so much more pleasant

    • Indeed, I tried to not repeat their mistake of sounding like you’re speaking in objective terms.

  • That’s my point. They were stating it like it was objective, so I countered with my subjective opinion.