| > 3rd party extensions were causing it to load slowly. Yep, and I liked it that way. I had piles of right click extensions that I used every day, and if one made it slow I uninstalled it. Windows is a tool, it shouldn't be any more prescriptive than a hammer. * > How are you measuring this? How do you specifically know how much memory it should take? Windows 7 required 1Gb of ram. Windows 11 requires 4Gb (and is unusable with only 4 - windows 7 actually ran with reasonable speed with 1Gb). Windows 11 does NOT offer 4 times the utility or security, it just offers unwanted services. > It's even more convenient in macOS. It's right on the permanently pinned Finder icon in the Dock! That made me laugh out loud. Still, if my work crashed and I suggested to the boss that I build a special "restart" button into the menu rather than fixing it I would need to work on my resume urgently. *EDIT* - Had they made it optional I wouldn't be complaining. Instead you have to use registry hacks to get it back. I'm not frustrated that things changed, I'm frustrated that it has less functionality than it did before and is more expensive in terms of compute. It does less, but costs more. |
How can anyone claim that's true? It does a lot _more_ than Windows 7 did. It has Defender as a full built-in suite. It has VBS. It has a completely different scheduler. It supports the App model. It has a mature virtualization framework. It has ReFS (and the ability to disable file system filters!).
...On and on and on. Windows 11 isn't a 7 with a bit of new GUI paint.
I mean, why stop at your Windows 7 v. 11 complaint? Windows 3.11 only required kilobytes of RAM and ran great; NT was the hefty one with a 12MB minimum! But each one ran Notepad, had Word, NT4 had a couple browsers, etc.
Generally commercial OSes don't take away major bits of impactful functionality that are going to magically minimize their footprint.