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by ComodoHacker 1548 days ago
I see they're honestly trying to ease life for technically illiterate users (or, put it another way, to chase Apple's "just works" experience). But ignoring the needs of professional users (who are influencers) is a sure way to divert all users.
2 comments

Many technically illiterate users don't like forced automatic updates either. Having your software behave one way one day and another the next day is user-hostile. The only people it helps are organizations that wish to lower support costs.
I have heard disturbing stories from tech-illiterate windows users complaining about forced upgrades, reboots—even fullscreen Office365 ads. It's a pain to be "the computer guy" for windows users. They need help constantly and for silly things that has changed place or behaviour. I also do support for tech-illiterate linux users on Fedora and they never call or have trouble. It just works, even with auto-updated flatpaks enabled.
I'm not even tech illiterate (I used to work at Microsoft!) and I was thrown off by the fullscreen Office365 ads they added around 2019. The shortcut was just "all of your modifier keys" so it got activated randomly when I picked up my keyboard by the corner and it took me a bit to track that down. Think I had to fix it with a registry key. It's fucking nonsense and it's really no mystery why users don't want automatic updates.
Yeah ton's of memes out there by windows users who were forced to upgrade 5 minutes before a meeting or something. It's a real issue. It's why I leave my office laptop on all night, so they can do their stupid forced upgrades in the middle of the night like they schedule them. I have too many meeting to wait for a 30minute - 1 hour update popping up unexpectedly.
OK but even Apple lets you toggle automatic updates on or off.
And so does Google Play Store. Even windows has the settings buried somewhere