![]() I'll spot you maybe a week to bitch about things while you're ingraining new muscle memory routines, but after that I expect that you pull up your big boy/girl pants and get on with it. The moment you stop doing that, you become worthless and should retire or find a new career. Part of your fucking job is to keep up with the latest changes/advancements. I do not accept that weak ass excuse from anyone in any professional field. The other good improvements, including some UI things, are too tiny to mention and pale in comparison to the glaring time wasters.ĭo you want your doctor to decide it's too much of a hassle to keep up to date on the latest medical advances and keep treating you the way things were done when they were in med school? You want your auto mechanic to only know how to fix engines from the days before the catalytic converter? How about the pilot on the next flight you take, they don't really need to keep training on new cockpit layouts and functions, do they? The police shouldn't have to learn about all the new ways criminals come up with to avoid being arrested criminals should just keep doing the same thing ad infinitum, it's not fair! The best features of Windows 11 up to now are: Nested-V for AMD and robocopy.exe /iorate. Again loss of productivity due tu rude behaviour on the GUI side of Windows 11. ![]() Again loss of productivity.Īdd the constant needy-pushy "We've improved XY, new feature Z here" upon start of many programs happening on a weekly base, which often block the MS-program (or APP) you try to use until you click it away. A minute later and it works as it should have on the first try. The taskbar is just the most prominent example of this wasting the users time.Īpart from that the Win+S searching often does not find, even though it is in the start menu when you click through it manually. Actions which took (or still take in case of Win10) less than a second now take three or more seconds. But quite a few things were done half-assed (or arsed, depending on your continent) again. Windows 11 UI does have a few good points, including tiny details in the file explorer, and it works. Lots of actions which are done similar in all operations systems now need more mouse clicks + more searching in case of combined explorer view since you have no oversight any more. If is not about the "new", it is about the loss of productivity. > You have to learn something new once a decade or so! The horror! I need some software that doesn't work well. While I love using Linux, it isn't an option. I've chosen not to with good reason, It's not just I forgot to set it up.īefore you suggest Linux is an option. There are some things I do on my PC that don't play nicely if I'm signed in with a Microsoft account, so while I do make full use of my Microsoft account, I cannot use it to log in to the machine, but I still get regular reminders that I should be signing in with that account. I have Windows 11 through a free entitlement from work, so while I didn't pay for it, it has been paid for, yet I have to put up with adverts in the start menu, and the increasing requirment to have a Microsoft account to use it. Generally, I like Windows 11 (controversial, I know), but this annoys me. Mine would be, but MS insist on adding extra crap on the first screen. If you have a lot of applications installed (as I do, sometimes), it can help even if your start menu is well organised. I do, generally, type the first few letters of what I want in the start menu. But that only matters if you print for professional, and if you are there you will have a different Linux approach to get those things too :D.Īgreed. But you may not get all capabilities, be it either color fine-tuning, automatic puncher, or automatic stapler and so on. ![]() ![]() ![]() Include a long with with workarounds for some printer bugs like text fine, images upside down as famous example. Though Linux cheats a bit on that: It just talks PCL5/PCL6/Postscript, and since most printers are fine with that it "just works". Take the corporate stuff, and it works normal. And you cannot talk to the, here printer as example, as PCL5 or PCL6 or postscript or any other well known language. Even sharing on a network does not work due to the design decision of HP. You don't get the driver, you get a Install-tool which only works with an HP account. It depends on WHICH HP device you choose though, never take the home-user stuff, which started hard locked in Internet requirement a while ago. Probably THE main reasons MS wants to lock 3rd party out of their printing system. ![]()
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