Top
Best
New

Posted by jovial_cavalier 1 day ago

Windows quality update: Progress we've made since March(blogs.windows.com)
140 points | 405 commentspage 8
widowlark 6 hours ago|
the post shared here is clearly written with AI.
alex1138 5 hours ago|
You're absolutely right!
tjpnz 11 hours ago||
Will I still have the urge to stab myself in the hand repeatedly?
MagicMoonlight 3 hours ago||
Lmao, since the neo they’re panicking. It’s over microslop.
beanjuiceII 1 day ago||
"trust me bro"
vachina 11 hours ago|
Yeah exactly. They already have a fixed distro that is Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC.
DaiPlusPlus 11 hours ago||
...and there's clearly huge market-demand for Windows LTSC amongst retail customers, and yet, MS's C-levels already decided for them that no amount of love nor money - excepting a sufficiently large enterprise licensing contract - can legally entitle you to a license - or even official media - for Windows LTSC.

It reminds me of when Adobe ended perpetual licensing and switched to cloud(TM)-only, subscription licensing for Photoshop, et al: many of us (myself included) assumed that Adobe was surely making a foolish mistake to abandon perpetual-license customers, but it turns out[1] that was the plan all along: those customers are a vocal minority who can demonstrably afford to pay more, the rest of the customer-base doesn't care enough to switch to a competitor. Over 10 years later (2013), we haven't seen any of Photoshop's then-promising upstart competitors come close.

...on that basis, I don't think MSFT's recent backpedalling on Windows 11's disrespect for its own users is in any way a response to us power-users complaining online - or even because any number of us did fully migrate off Windows and onto Linux, but instead because of all the recent talk overseas from foreign governments (France, Germany) taking active steps to secure their digital-sovereignty and deploying more Linux desktops; and a good way to get people (and decision-makers in government and large businesses) personally interested in digital-sovereignty is by pointing out how shitty their own corporate desktop UX has gotten.

I'll gladly eat my hat when/if MS graciously allows regular retail consumers, and not just large organizations - and those of us with a $2000/yr MSDN Subscription - the privilege of paying for an OS without advertising built-in to the shell and having hard dependencies on proprietary online services.

[1] (This article has some hallmarks of LLM "assistance" but gets the point across; and cites sources at the bottom): https://secondactsbiz.substack.com/p/adobe-the-transformatio...

hansmayer 9 hours ago||
[dead]
nikanj 8 hours ago|
[dead]