- Joined
- Mar 6, 2017
- Messages
- 3,358 (1.18/day)
- Location
- North East Ohio, USA
System Name | My Ryzen 7 7700X Super Computer |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 7700X |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B650 Aorus Elite AX |
Cooling | DeepCool AK620 with Arctic Silver 5 |
Memory | 2x16GB G.Skill Trident Z5 NEO DDR5 EXPO (CL30) |
Video Card(s) | XFX AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE |
Storage | Samsung 980 EVO 1 TB NVMe SSD (System Drive), Samsung 970 EVO 500 GB NVMe SSD (Game Drive) |
Display(s) | Acer Nitro XV272U (DisplayPort) and Acer Nitro XV270U (DisplayPort) |
Case | Lian Li LANCOOL II MESH C |
Audio Device(s) | On-Board Sound / Sony WH-XB910N Bluetooth Headphones |
Power Supply | MSI A850GF |
Mouse | Logitech M705 |
Keyboard | Steelseries |
Software | Windows 11 Pro 64-bit |
Benchmark Scores | https://valid.x86.fr/liwjs3 |
I see that you've bought into all of the clickbaity articles that talk about how bad Windows 10 is and now incompetent Microsoft is today. Yet, as @bug pointed out, Windows today is (despite the issues) is nowhere near as bad as Windows 9x was. I remember Windows 9x would crash if you looked at the screen funny. Windows 10, despite all of the so-called articles and news of it being a dumpster fire, is in fact not anywhere as bad as it truly is. Remember, these sites need clicks, they need advertising dollars, so they write their articles about Windows 10 to make it out to have massive issues.Really, in the Windows 95 / 98 / Windows 2000 era we never needed any telemetry or tracking. Yet today with all the telemetry in the OS as a substitute for monitoring performance and what more the amount of BSOD's after a failed update is even bigger then back in that era.
However, I am in no way saying that Windows 10 doesn't have issues. I agree that it does have issues; however, they're not nearly as widespread as some of the clickbaity articles would have you believe. You try writing an OS to run on just about everything from a high-end gaming machine, a cheap Dell, to a Frankenstein-box cobbled together from pieces and parts you found in your attic. Even Apple, who has vertical integration in which they own everything from how the hardware is designed to how the software is written still has issues. If Apple can't do it right 100% of the time and they own the whole platform, how do you expect Microsoft to do it right with an ecosystem with hardware and software permutations that number the stars in the night sky? That's right... you can't.