Disclaimer, MS employee here, but I've got to say that the cloud sign-in is one of my favorite features.
The amount of time I spend worrying about and preparing for a hard drive failure has significantly gone down.
I'm able to have one device at home, and another at work, and they stay reasonably in-sync with one another.
I'm able to check things from my phone (even if I can't be productive on the phone, at least having access to progress made on my home machine is important).
I see others commenting here about how hard it is to create a local-only account on Windows 11, and I don't want to dismiss such criticism, but I'm personally never going back to a local-only account on my devices.
Good for you. Most people don't want Microsoft to own their data. You get that? User's data belong to them, if you are set to share all your personal data with Microsoft , then it should be an opt-in process (maybe they can entice you with Bing points or some sort of rewards?). It should be offline by default. As customer are already paying for the operating system. You can also use many syncing solutions from Google drive to dropbox, and many others. Regarding the "amount of time I spend worrying about hard drive failure" , never have I had a hard drive that just dies, is possible , but extremely unlikely, I make a backup of my important stuffs to other hard drives or the cloud. Cloud sign-on is just another way to track users and violates their basic privacy rights.
I’ve had more critical OneDrive failures in the last two years than hard disk failures in the last 30 years. I’ve experienced actual data loss on OneDrive three times since 2020.
It’s not a backup and it’s a shitty safety net for trivial cases. Fortunately I had beem backing up OneDrive up using Beyond Compare to an external disk and doing a binary comparison so I could find the cocked up files and recover them.
It’s funny the only time I’ve had to do a restore is because Microsoft’s cloud fucked up.
> people are syncing their personal and work devices
No, that's not what was said and I'm not sure how you interpreted that. I have a work device at home and in-office. My work devices use different user accounts from my personal devices.
It's like religion. You have one. Good for you. Don't shove it down other people's throats.
Edit: I just realized this could read rather harsh. I didn't refer to you explaining your preferences, but "shoving it down our throats" is seemingly the current attitude of MS as a whole.
The amount of time I spend worrying about and preparing for a hard drive failure has significantly gone down.
I'm able to have one device at home, and another at work, and they stay reasonably in-sync with one another.
I'm able to check things from my phone (even if I can't be productive on the phone, at least having access to progress made on my home machine is important).
I see others commenting here about how hard it is to create a local-only account on Windows 11, and I don't want to dismiss such criticism, but I'm personally never going back to a local-only account on my devices.