Dave Merrill
Legend!
My Win11 work laptop seems to be handling similar stuff "normally". I wonder what's so different.Dang, I’d be mad too if mine acted like that. Wonder what the deal is…mine does things like that perfectly.
What a drag.
My Win11 work laptop seems to be handling similar stuff "normally". I wonder what's so different.Dang, I’d be mad too if mine acted like that. Wonder what the deal is…mine does things like that perfectly.
Did you install from scratch or update from win10?My Win11 work laptop seems to be handling similar stuff "normally". I wonder what's so different.
What a drag.
Did you install from scratch or update from win10?
I've always experienced problems when upgrading windows...
As mentioned earlier, I've had mine since '22, but it was a clean install.Did you install from scratch or update from win10?
I've always experienced problems when upgrading windows...
Works 80% of times ^^
Who the heck is writing the code over there? This is BASIC OS functionality and it feels like it was written by someone who just graduated from ITT Technical Institute.
What a steaming pile of excrement.
Seriously? After all these years this is what you come up with?
1. It's an ugly OS. White on light gray on just slightly darker gray. Or you can change the mode to dark and then it's black on black on black. But only for some things. Other windows remain gray on gray on gray. Inconsistency seems to be the one common theme in the OS.
2. Window borders are one pixel wide. So when you have windows on top of each other all this white and gray makes it hard to see where one window ends and another begins.
3. Scroll bars. Again, inconsistency rules here. In some windows the scroll bars disappear. You can turn that "feature" off but then the actual bar you drag turns to a thin line unless you hover over it. In other windows the scroll bar doesn't disappear and the bar doesn't change to a thin line.
4. Did I mention inconsistency? There's a settings "Applet" and also a Control Panel. They use completely different UI language. Some of the things in one aren't in the other but some things are common between the two. WTF is that? Oh, and in Control Panel it has an item "Backup and Restore (Windows 7)". WTF is that?!!! This is an upgrade from a clean install of Windows 10.
5. Lazy programming. I wanted to connect to our corporate server via the VPN. A window popped up asking for user name and password. Near the bottom it said something like "The credentials you have entered are incorrect". Not surprising since I haven't entered any yet. So I enter my user name and password, which are correct, and the message doesn't go away. I hit enter and the dialog box closes and I'm granted access.
The whole thing feels like it's just a money grab. I can't see a single advantage over Windows 10 (which was nearly as bad). I'm sure they'd tell me there's more "security" and "ease of use" but I don't see why that stuff couldn't have been added to Windows 10. The core OS under the goofy UI is the same.
The Start menu and Taskbar have been changed yet again and still don't feel like there's any logic to them. Screams "designed by committee".
But we get "Widgets" which are things that maybe some people use.
Did you install from scratch or update from win10?
I've always experienced problems when upgrading windows...
Always do a scratch install of Windows operating systems. Too much baggage otherwise. My music laptop is Windows 11 and working fine. Lenovo.+1000. This is a big one. Sometimes you get lucky and in place upgrades go ok. In my experience, most of the time they don't. It can be a huge pain in the ass to have to reinstall and re-activate a bunch of software, but I'd wager Cliff would have a lot less issues with a clean install of 11.
Years back we did a ton of in place upgrades to Windows 10 at work in a big push to get everyone off of Windows 7 after it went EOL. By the time it was all said and done, I think we ended up replacing or re-imaging about 75% to 80% of those machines to solve weird issues after the upgrade. Lots of profile related weirdness, half migrated settings, permissions issues, etc. We learned our lesson and chose to only upgrade folks from 10 to 11 when it was time to replace their machines. SO many less issues from the clean imaged machines.
You CAN install without the microsoft account, but it takes a few additional steps and is easier with Pro (reference from Ars). That's what I did. No way I'll tie my system to their account.In the EU it is called a secondary license and I think it was ordered by the EU court. The reason was that if someone can legally sell used cars why can't they also sell used Wins? I have 5 of them too and they have worked so far, the only problems are with Win 11 and their mandatory Microsoft account.
So if they have an outage we won't log in. At least that's what I think and it has happened to me now and it has been bothering me for a while, I attribute it to the hardware.
I currently have Win 11 but my Start menu and search box are not working.
There are new vulnerabilities that need to get patched. When Microsoft says they're ending support for Windows 10 it means they will no longer be patching it. Your OS will work fine, but if some hacker in the future finds a chink in the armor, Microsoft won't fix it and you'll be at risk. For the average user this is a can you kick down the road for a while but for commercial users, this is a business risk.May I jump in this thread just for a moment and ask for some basic advice.
What exactly is the downside and pitfalls of staying on windows 10.
I use my laptop for only Axe Edit and YouTube for playing along to backing tracks, so I do need access to the internet but I don’t use it for email or downloading dubious files.
I don’t really want to spend out on a new laptop as it only gets used for the previously mentioned activities.
Do I really need to look at a virus checker if this is all I use it for?
I have done some research but couldn’t really get an answer in “layman’s terms”.
I’m not particularly confident as regards the inner workings of computers but I do have some basic knowledge.
Any advice will be much appreciated.
Paperjace said what I was going to say. As for the virus checker, Windows Defender, which comes with Windows 10, is more than sufficient in catching any viruses. You don't need anything else. (Maybe MalwareBytes but meh)May I jump in this thread just for a moment and ask for some basic advice.
What exactly is the downside and pitfalls of staying on windows 10.
I use my laptop for only Axe Edit and YouTube for playing along to backing tracks, so I do need access to the internet but I don’t use it for email or downloading dubious files.
I don’t really want to spend out on a new laptop as it only gets used for the previously mentioned activities.
Do I really need to look at a virus checker if this is all I use it for?
I have done some research but couldn’t really get an answer in “layman’s terms”.
I’m not particularly confident as regards the inner workings of computers but I do have some basic knowledge.
Any advice will be much appreciated.