- Joined
- Feb 4, 2021
I've never fucked with Windows 11 in an extensive manner, thank god. The few experiences I have had were retarded enough. As others have said, basic shit like fucking with copy/paste, and fucking with startup program settings and notifications all caused issues that weren't there in 10. And 10 was already bad enough. 11 is just another iteration of the overall strategy of making shit unnecessarily hard to manage if you are not one of two groups of people. A) retards B) Organizations with a LARGE support contract.What sort of day-to-day desktop OS tasks did you find unacceptably difficult in Windows 11 that got smooth & easy when you switched to Linux?
As for smooth and easy in Linux: when all major DE's implement this functionality easily and cleanly, you have no excuse not to.
oh and also "you need a microsoft account for this basic functionality". Lol fuck off.
In a wider context, the other big issues with Windows in general that Linux solves are managing updates, and fixing broken systems. But I guess that fits outside your weird "day to day" parameter.
We all know about your special snowflake usecase that everyone who doesn't want to switch to Linux just totally coincidentally has. We all know how you hate the Linux userbase so much for whatever retarded reason that you will never switch. I dunno why you hate autists that can solve problems more than the IIT-dropout pajeetfest that is the Windows support base, but hey you do you boo.I can count on one hand the number of times I've opened Powershell. I've rarely looked up how to do even trivial tasks in Linux (take your pick of distro) that DIDN'T involve terminal commands.
Not that I'm terribly put off by using a command line if it's reasonably straightforward, but to pretend there's an equivalent amount of it in Windows is pure delusion. I mean, you're just writing fanfiction about what you imagine Windows to be like.
But if we were to be retarded and take you at your word; I'd just say, tough shit. Here in the real world where the vast majority of people don't have your special snowflake usecase, managing Windows deployments of anything more than 5 people makes Powershell an absolute necessity, not optional. And if you have your own lone machine, the amount of GUI functionality in Windows has been decreasing for 5-10 years now and is only accelerating. For fixing actual issues faced by corporate clients that they actually give a shit about (read: not you), Microsoft knows Powershell is the only real way.