- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
Guess who's learning something that should've been common knowledge long ago.
Thanks to PowerShell, winget and the winget module, you can install all VC redistributables with a single one-liner. You just pipe three commands together and it just works.
I really need to write a fresh install setup PowerShell script at some point, it really is powerful as shit once you wrap your head around it's object oriented structure. Get a list of all the essential software that I usually install on a fresh system, do any extra little tweaks and be done with it. Spend a little bit of time whipping one up, reuse it to save more time in the long run.
I've been using Win11 for a while now as it came pre-installed on my laptop, and after applying my usual tweaks, and just a few more Win11 specific ones like installing StartAllBack, I now have a good point of reference towards how bad Win11 actually is. It's just a bit more annoying than 10.
However, credit where credit's due, Win11 did some things right.
The Pajeets have unfucked a lot of 8/10's tablet oriented UI designs and made them more civilized. For example, the Settings app with it's WinUI3 look is now structured in a humane way instead of using some tablet tiles. Categories laid out on a list on the left, it's contents shown on the right. This is a very positive change, I like the new Settings a lot. The responsiveness of WinUI3 is another story but Microsoft's UI/UX designers had their head in the right place when they came up with it. I also prefer the new rounded gradient look over the Metro flatness, fight me. There needs to be a bigger push for gradients to come back in UI design.
The quick settings menu got separated from the notifications area, and both are pop-ups now. While I'm not a huge fan of joining the calendar with the notification area due to limited vertical space, at least on 150% scaling it's an issue, the new quick settings menu mimics smartphone shade quick settings, and that's a good thing, especially on a laptop. WiFi, cellular, Bluetooth, audio, screen brightness, battery, all in one compact spot. It's great, one of the best UI changes Win11 has made with it's attempt to refresh Win10's 2015 tablet leftovers.
That is not to say there are regressions. The taskbar and context menu have been beaten to death, so here are some of my own pet peeves based on my personal on-hands experience.
The removal of the pre-defined default programs for media viewing, web browsing et cetera. It was a good thing. You select your browser, it automatically associates it with all file types you'd care for it to support. Same with the image viewer, video player, audio player, mail client and so on. Now you basically have to set every file extension by yourself as Microsoft has removed this feature for no good reason. Unless they've buried it in there somewhere in a way where even I can't find it.
This one is very specific. If you have more than one keyboard layouts, Win+Spacebar will switch between them, and it will show a small pop-up telling you which layouts you're switching between. While the layout switch itself is still instantaneous in Win11, for some reason this pop-up now has a delay before it shows up while on 10 it was instant. A very small, but noticeable regression, and it's really odd given the fact that this pop-up is very snappy when invoked from the taskbar. It's impressive that the Jeets also half-ass fucking things up as well.
I'm yet to daily drive 11 on my desktop to have a proper perspective of how much worse it's performance is when it's not being restricted by a dynamically downclocking mobile AMD chip with a power saving plan active, so I'm not really gonna comment on that too much. Needless to say my laptop work so far hasn't been causing me issues and the battery life wouldn't be overly impressive no matter the OS since it's all x86 by the end of the day.
I'm sure there's a dozen of other issues that everyone using 11 is complaining about that I don't face as I tend to replace most of Microsoft's front facing parts with my own that work better for me, but from my personal perspective, Windows 11 is very much manageable. Though it is my perspective and I'm a fucking NT wizard at this point so this opinion is about as valuable to most like the opinion of a Gentoo user that managing Linux is piss easy.
Find-WinGetPackage Microsoft.VCRedist. | ? ID -Match "(\.x86|x64)$" | Install-WinGetPackage
Thanks to PowerShell, winget and the winget module, you can install all VC redistributables with a single one-liner. You just pipe three commands together and it just works.
I really need to write a fresh install setup PowerShell script at some point, it really is powerful as shit once you wrap your head around it's object oriented structure. Get a list of all the essential software that I usually install on a fresh system, do any extra little tweaks and be done with it. Spend a little bit of time whipping one up, reuse it to save more time in the long run.
I've been using Win11 for a while now as it came pre-installed on my laptop, and after applying my usual tweaks, and just a few more Win11 specific ones like installing StartAllBack, I now have a good point of reference towards how bad Win11 actually is. It's just a bit more annoying than 10.
However, credit where credit's due, Win11 did some things right.
The Pajeets have unfucked a lot of 8/10's tablet oriented UI designs and made them more civilized. For example, the Settings app with it's WinUI3 look is now structured in a humane way instead of using some tablet tiles. Categories laid out on a list on the left, it's contents shown on the right. This is a very positive change, I like the new Settings a lot. The responsiveness of WinUI3 is another story but Microsoft's UI/UX designers had their head in the right place when they came up with it. I also prefer the new rounded gradient look over the Metro flatness, fight me. There needs to be a bigger push for gradients to come back in UI design.
The quick settings menu got separated from the notifications area, and both are pop-ups now. While I'm not a huge fan of joining the calendar with the notification area due to limited vertical space, at least on 150% scaling it's an issue, the new quick settings menu mimics smartphone shade quick settings, and that's a good thing, especially on a laptop. WiFi, cellular, Bluetooth, audio, screen brightness, battery, all in one compact spot. It's great, one of the best UI changes Win11 has made with it's attempt to refresh Win10's 2015 tablet leftovers.
That is not to say there are regressions. The taskbar and context menu have been beaten to death, so here are some of my own pet peeves based on my personal on-hands experience.
The removal of the pre-defined default programs for media viewing, web browsing et cetera. It was a good thing. You select your browser, it automatically associates it with all file types you'd care for it to support. Same with the image viewer, video player, audio player, mail client and so on. Now you basically have to set every file extension by yourself as Microsoft has removed this feature for no good reason. Unless they've buried it in there somewhere in a way where even I can't find it.
This one is very specific. If you have more than one keyboard layouts, Win+Spacebar will switch between them, and it will show a small pop-up telling you which layouts you're switching between. While the layout switch itself is still instantaneous in Win11, for some reason this pop-up now has a delay before it shows up while on 10 it was instant. A very small, but noticeable regression, and it's really odd given the fact that this pop-up is very snappy when invoked from the taskbar. It's impressive that the Jeets also half-ass fucking things up as well.
I'm yet to daily drive 11 on my desktop to have a proper perspective of how much worse it's performance is when it's not being restricted by a dynamically downclocking mobile AMD chip with a power saving plan active, so I'm not really gonna comment on that too much. Needless to say my laptop work so far hasn't been causing me issues and the battery life wouldn't be overly impressive no matter the OS since it's all x86 by the end of the day.
I'm sure there's a dozen of other issues that everyone using 11 is complaining about that I don't face as I tend to replace most of Microsoft's front facing parts with my own that work better for me, but from my personal perspective, Windows 11 is very much manageable. Though it is my perspective and I'm a fucking NT wizard at this point so this opinion is about as valuable to most like the opinion of a Gentoo user that managing Linux is piss easy.