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Windows 11 Releases October 5th, Free Upgrade from Windows 10

You are highly likely to be dissapointed, because it, just like W10, will "just work" (Todd). Seriously though, the average PC of the average user will not have issues with stability ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Like W10? For those who stay on 10, there will indeed be fewer reasons for update-o-phobia from now on. 11, however, will keep getting feature updates and UI changes for many years to come, each one with a lot of potential to break a thing or two.
 
I bet MS got full persuasion from Intel to get Windows 11 out the door ahead of Adler Lake. Can’t have bad benchmarks on review day.
I can already imagine the headlines: Windows 11 brings the best of your Adler Lake; Widows 11 designed specifically to take advantage of latest intel processors; Microsoft works closely with intel to bring you the best possible experience...

Just slap an intel logo at the bottom and you get the entire marketing slide deck of intel's.

Like W10? For those who stay on 10, there will indeed be fewer reasons for update-o-phobia from now on. 11, however, will keep getting feature updates and UI changes for many years to come, each one with a lot of potential to break a thing or two.
Many years to come? Hmm...
 
Upgrade immediately, stability is for cowards. If my PC is always working properly I'd have nothing to tinker with.
Agreed! Gluttons for punishment upgrade & unite! If you start losing too much hair from the stress, there's always Rogaine with Minoxidil, stool softeners, and a box of chocolates. :laugh:
 
I thought vista was pretty good lol.. but I had a pretty good pc for it I guess. 7 was good, 10 is ok, a bit boring with its blandness. 11 looks good. One thing about 11 is they make you access a sub menu to paste something that you’ve copied. Or how it can get uppity when you change a piece of hardware, like a cpu.There are other annoyances I suppose. Will I switch? I don’t know.. maybe. Might try out Linux again, it’s been a long time since I ran it.
 
I think the non-beta version will be 2022. ;)
 
For those that really like to break stuff and tinker with the latest, Linux is pretty hard to beat. You could install a different distro every night for probably a month and then start all over again! :D
 
Side question, does anyone know if we can stop updates entirely in Win 11?
 
Wow Oct 5th this year. Great all the work I'm doing to get IE to work with Old Versions of java to make this whole thing I'm working on being erased by Windows 11 and Edge that supports nothing at all.

Ya I think Linux might be a option for all things down the road.
 
For those that really like to break stuff and tinker with the latest, Linux is pretty hard to beat. You could install a different distro every night for probably a month and then start all over again! :D
And if someone has time to lose and a screw loose, they can always start deploying Gentoo from Stage 1. :kookoo:
 
Agreed! Gluttons for punishment upgrade & unite! If you start losing too much hair from the stress, there's always Rogaine with Minoxidil, stool softeners, and a box of chocolates. :laugh:
I've been on Windows 11 since the dev-only builds, and there's been a disappointing lack of tinkering. File explorer was crash-happy in the early builds, it seems stable now if a bit slow, but it's improving every build. I'm guessing this is related to their storage stack changes for support of DirectStorage. Mainly there have been some UI bugs that are quickly squashed.

Apart from that, it's basically like using Windows 10 with a new theme. It's my daily driver and VR simracing system and I've not experienced an OS crash or really any major issue at all

I have had to update things like my registry key to disable Bing in Windows search though.
 
One thing about 11 is they make you access a sub menu to paste something that you’ve copied.
No they don't, you will see a little clipboard icon at the top of the right click menu when you have copied something, that is the "paste" option, of course there is also the quicker CTRL+V method, though some options are only available through the "show more options" sub-menu which is an annoyance though seems to be more 3rd party options such as in my case, Winrar/AMD control panel when on the desktop etc, I have placed the AMD control panel on the taskbar now which works just as well, the winrar one, not so much and you still need to access the "show more options" menu to use that in some circumstances which is needless, I agree.
 
No they don't, you will see a little clipboard icon at the top of the right click menu when you have copied something, that is the "paste" option, of course there is also the quicker CTRL+V method, though some options are only available through the "show more options" sub-menu which is an annoyance though seems to be more 3rd party options such as in my case, Winrar/AMD control panel when on the desktop etc, I have placed the AMD control panel on the taskbar now which works just as well, the winrar one, not so much and you still need to access the "show more options" menu to use that in some circumstances which is needless, I agree.
Yeah, most people overlook the little pictograms for copy/paste/rename etc. at first (including myself). Microsoft is going to need to communicate properly to make it abundantly clear to users that this is what those options are, something they haven't been doing very well in general when it comes to W11.

The 'show more options' menu is the old Windows 10 context menu. They've changed it in Windows 11 to fix the horrific mess that it's become when third party apps add their own options, among other things. Third party apps like 7Zip, Winrar, Notepad++ etc. will need to update to support Windows 11 context menu options, until then the Windows 10 context menu is left accessible for compatibility.
 
tip of the day: do not upgrade until 6 months before release. wait for the bug to be fix :cool:
Fixed that for you

I'm enjoying 11 as my daily OS
 
Yeah, most people overlook the little pictograms for copy/paste/rename etc. at first (including myself).
Lol I didn't even see that until now. Ugh.

:laugh:
 
My only worry is whether DirectX 9 games will be affected
 
nah theres genuinely a lot of small improvements, multi monitor works a lot better in general use, as an example. I can enable and disable the second screen with games running, and nothing crashes or glitches out, with a little animation as it happens.
 
What about the rest of us? Better luck with other Windows-compatible OS?

Generally? Aside from drivers (manufacturer's job, not MS one) I can hardly imagine anything other than some ultra specific really badly written software giving trouble. From my experience stuff starts to break when people use "bloat removers/decrapifiers" and otherwise mess with the OS because they think they know better than "M$"

Like W10? For those who stay on 10, there will indeed be fewer reasons for update-o-phobia from now on. 11, however, will keep getting feature updates and UI changes for many years to come, each one with a lot of potential to break a thing or two.
By like W10 I meant having little issues, if any. I can speak of ~1.5k computers running W10 at my work (various models/firmware/drivers/OS major build versions/etc.) with the added stuff like GPO's, BitLocker, DLP solution - things you expect from a workplace - "it just works".
 
This is WAAAAY too soon, IMO. Was running 11 Beta channel and it needed a lot more time in the oven. In fact I reverted back to 10 (with a clean install) because it was causing a number of issues with my laptop (which is only a year old - Lattitude 5505 with Ryzen 4500u). Needless to say, I will be holding off on upgrading to 11 for a long time yet.
 
For those on the insider builds, would you just keep your current install or download the official release ISO?
I'll likely do a test run of official ISO to check for
-ability to actually install on unsupported device, tweaking registry during installation.
-added restrictions/bloat on consumer releases. no good if i can't change x setting, remove x app or giant fucking raid shadow genshin of duty banner on my screen.
-functionality, specifically as MS is disabling winupdate which I don't care, but one of the main point of 10/11 over 8.1 which I use, is the plug play driver for everything post 2015. If I cannot find driver for everything from my haswell macbook, well ill use 11 anyways. Desktop is new so no support issue there.

If above criteria is met, I would prefer the use of official iso compare to uupdump, because the former has no lengthy deployment phase on new install. and, I do not use win 10 + insider program because I don't like the idea of trace element of obsolete component in my system.
I am not daily driving 11 rn, even though in VM I deem it stable, they fixed the right click bug and group policy UI bug already. Its just preferring a consumer release so I won't encounter rarer bugs exclusive to insider release. That and some of the most funky changes (apks) still is completely missing. I reckon I could use something like that, so I wait.

TLDR official iso prefer, unless it sucks, then revert to last uupdump build
 
From what I've read, the reason why Microsoft is requiring newer CPUs is because of a technical reason. Starting with Windows 10, Microsoft included something called Virtualization-Based Security or VBS to isolate parts of system memory from the rest of the system. VBS includes an optional feature called Hypervisor-protected code integrity, or HVCI. HVCI can be enabled on any Windows 10 PC that doesn't have driver incompatibility issues, but older computers will incur a significant performance penalty because their processors don't support mode-based execution control, or MBEC. PCs without processors that support MBEC rely on software emulation called "Restricted User Mode," which does get you the security benefits but affects performance more (sometimes as much as 40% by some users).

Going forth, the optional security features of Windows 10 will be mandatory under Windows 11.

Why Windows 11 has such strict hardware requirements, according to Microsoft | Ars Technica
 
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