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Original author here! Thanks for (re)sharing. We previously discussed this at length in https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36503983. I think this article has "aged well" in the sense that... nothing has changed for the better :( Since I wrote it, I did upgrade my machine: I now have a 24-core 13th Gen i7 laptop with a fast NVMe drive and... well, Windows 11 is _still_ visibly laggy throughout. Comparing it to KDE on the same machine is like night and day in terms of general desktop snappiness (and yes, KDE has its own bloat too, but it seems to have evolved in a more "manageable" manner). I've also gotten an M2 laptop for work since then, and same issue there: I remember how transformative the M1 felt at launch with everything being extremely quick in macOS, but the signs of bloat are _already_ showing up. Upgrading anything takes ages because every app is a monster that weighs hundreds of MBs, and reopening apps after a reboot is painfully slow. Still, though, macOS feels generally better than Windows on modern hardware. About the article itself, I'll say that there was a complaint back then (and I see it now here too) about my blaming of .NET rewrites being misplaced. Yes, I'll concede that; I was too quick to write that, and likely wrong. But don't let that distract yourself from the rest of the article. Modern Notepad is inexplicably slower than older Notepad, and for what reason? (I honestly don't know and haven't researched it.) And finally, I'll leave you with this other article that I wrote as a follow-up to that one, with a list of things that I feel developers just don't think about when writing software, and that inevitably leads to the issues we see industry-wide: https://jmmv.dev/2023/09/performance-is-not-big-o.html |