• Sigh_Bafanada@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I use windows for work, and I just had to update to Win 11 when I got a new PC.

    Jesus Christ I hate it.

    So many fundamental parts of my workflow have been disrupted. I have yet to find one change which I actually like.

    I thought they did a pretty good job with Windows 10, but this one is five steps backwards.

    • Hasuris@sopuli.xyz
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      10 months ago

      I don’t know a thing about windows 11 but they’ll have to claw windows 10 away from me to force me to switch. Why would I even want to? Windows 10 works just fine and even that I only switched to because they fucking forced me. If I could I’d still use Windows 2000. I loved that one. XP was fine as well though. I don’t want to worry about my OS. I want it to fucking work.

      But an OS you don’t need to upgrade doesn’t generate money.

    • Soggytoast@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      I don’t do much on my computer any more. But even with my minimal use windows 11 ruined several key things that were fine from xp to windows 10. Things that don’t even make sense to be changed, biggest one is the alt tab.

      I work in I.T., and even after doing it a hundred times I still get lost finding the fucking network adapter page

      • Sigh_Bafanada@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I can no longer alt+f+s+a to open PowerShell as admin in the current folder

        I can no longer drag files into the address bar to move files to the parent folder.

        I can no longer see the seconds by clicking the clock on the taskbar.

        File explorer search is still shit.

        File properties window is still fixed size, and cannot be resized.

        We’re regressing, billy-boy.

      • DarthBueller@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I’ve got to say that the file explorer tabs are a great addition/comeback, and a vastly improved experience over the 90s incarnation where drag and drop was often hamstrung by system responsiveness (and could you even drag and drop to inactive tabs to activate them and bring them to the front back then? Don’t recall.) Using them in KDE Plasma at home , when i got a new win11laptop for work I was thrilled with many of the interface improvements. The telemetry and “widgets” are trash, though, as are the permanent ads in the windows context menu.

    • alyth@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Learning the shortcuts for multiple workspaces was a game changer for me in Windows.

      Win + Ctrl + D to create a new virtual desktop

      Win + Ctrl + ArrowRight or ArrowLeft to move to the next desktop

      Win + Tab to arrange all Windows and desktops

      Also dragging your window to the top to place it in a corner seems nice.

      At home I’ll always use Linux but for a work PC I can live with Windows.

      • Pantsofmagic@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Until you use a Microsoft office application and it is fundamentally broken with virtual desktops. If you try to open a document on one desktop it’ll switch to another if you had a different document open. There’s little glitches throughout the entire experience that make it so mediocre.

      • AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        But imagine, if you could just press win+number and then go to the exact workspace you want! Which KDE Plasma allows you to do.

        I seriously cant get used to using win+ctrl+arrows. If i could change this, and with powertoys windows would not be that bad.

        • Pantsofmagic@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          There’s something called SylphyHorn that helps sort out some of this. Unfortunately for me it’s broken on my work computer because of something in their security software.

    • Kingofthezyx@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      The only thing, literally the only thing, that I liked from Win11 over 10 is that it can run x86 apps on ARM - I could play Final Fantasy XI (20+ year old game) on Windows 11 dual-booted from my M1 MacBook Air, when I had one.

    • Grass@sh.itjust.works
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      10 months ago

      I mean between each good version, and now between each sub-decent version there is a shit version. Or 95 and 98 were both ok iirc and I don’t know about before that but 2000, vista, 8, and now 11. You have to wait for 12 when they make it marginally better but still worse than the previous decent one. But each decent one will be progressively worse still but the anger version exists between to increase acceptance of the next one.

      • chakan2@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I think 12 and the forced ad experience will finally break that trend. 11 was enough to get me to only buy Mac and Linux machines from here on out.

        I don’t know what happened with the w10 updates, but I had 4 machines die simultaneously with hard drive failures. That’s it…the non gaming rigs got Linux.

        • Grass@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          The updates have been especially cursed lately. The copilot showing up with auto update seemingly disabled including registry tweaks and the start bar search field coming back every update, onedrive and edge rising from the grave repeatedly. If I could physically beat the shit out of an operating system to make it behave I totally would, something I would never resort to for animals and most humans. Windows would deserve it.

          I’m already fully on Linux for gaming. I have a GPU passthrough vm but most of the games that require it end up being totally not my thing. It’s possible thay what I’ve called the layered deception method that also uses some Ms virtualization settings in addition to the kvm/qemu doesn’t work for fooling the anti cheats anymore though. I haven’t played any anti cheat titles in some time.