Windows 11 finally overtakes Windows 10 [in marketshare]
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That's great, but like, this was a native and very obvious feature in Windows 10 and every other Windows that I remember, and they somehow chopped it and never replaced it.
So was unlocking the taskbar and dragging it to the left side of the screen, now you literally can't. Apparently you can modify it via registry but half the buttons stop working because it isn't designed for that.
Crazy that that was what made me switch years ago....
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And yet i still can't click on icons on the taskbar to bring up a window that is behind another. Gotta use "alt+tab" until I get to the window I want to show up. At first I just thought it was my PC at work but I later found out that it's every PC in the entire building. It's absolutely infuriating that features that've worked for 30 years are now suddenly broken in Windows 11. I started migrating to Linux for my home PC and it has only made me hate Windows even more when I go into work.
Weird, I only get this with windows hello.
But seriously windows 11 has so many shitty fucking bugs. All my computer's except my work computer are mac or Linux. It really opens the eyes to how poorly built windows is these days.
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"Thing set to die soon now worth less than the only other option remaining."
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MS also recently shared that they lost 400 million Windows users. I bet most of them were Windows 10 users. This isn't "people finally moved from 10 to 11",, this is "people finally got so fed up with Windows that they abandoned it for other options" (mostly mobile/tablet but also some Linux and OS X).
400 million windows devices not users.
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Microsoft killing the desktop with 0 innovation
Oh they're "innovating" just not for the benefit of their users
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400 million windows devices not users.
That's why windows 11 overtook windows 10, people just got rid of their windows 10 devices
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we commissioned a brand new pc containing windows xp two weeks ago
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"Finally"
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And I still can't open the calendar by clicking on the clock on my second monitor.
I have no idea why windows 11 axed that and it just makes the UX worse. It doesn't even make it simpler for noob users.
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400 million windows devices not users.
Same difference. If someone has a Windows 10 device and got rid of it, but didn't purchase a Windows 11 device to replace it, they're no longer a Windows user. Sure they could have had multiple Windows devices for some reason, but it's rare for someone to own more computers than they have potential users to operate them (barring things like schools or companies that maintain a fixed pool of devices, although even they try to avoid having significant excess inventory). So yes, fewer Windows devices is to within a certain margin of error fewer Windows users.
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.............now I want to open 10 different calanders at once. In different colors. But only use the pink one. I'll close the other 9, and grumble "GOD DAMN COMPUTER!!! WHY DON'T THEY FIX THIS SHIT???"
And again.....only use the pink one.
You're joking but you could totally have 10 digital (or analog) clocks - in different time zones if you want - that popup a calendar with events from one or multiple of 10 different calendars in different colors and you can also set the popups to stay pinned until manually closed if you want to. KDE's widget system is extremely versatile.
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Same difference. If someone has a Windows 10 device and got rid of it, but didn't purchase a Windows 11 device to replace it, they're no longer a Windows user. Sure they could have had multiple Windows devices for some reason, but it's rare for someone to own more computers than they have potential users to operate them (barring things like schools or companies that maintain a fixed pool of devices, although even they try to avoid having significant excess inventory). So yes, fewer Windows devices is to within a certain margin of error fewer Windows users.
It's still an important distinction IMO