What is your primary operating system for 2022?


Your primary OS at home is?  

31 members have voted

  1. 1. Your primary OS at home is?

    • Windows older than 7
      0
    • Windows 7
      0
    • Windows 8.0
      0
    • Windows 8.1
      0
    • Windows 10
      15
    • Windows 11
      9
    • macOS 10.x
      1
    • macOS 11.x
      0
    • macOS 12.x
      1
    • Linux (specify distribution)
      5
    • Other
      0
  2. 2. Your primary OS for work is?

    • Windows older than 7
      0
    • Windows 7
      0
    • Windows 8.0
      0
    • Windows 8.1
      0
    • Windows 10
      15
    • Windows 11
      6
    • macOS 10.x
      0
    • macOS 11.x
      0
    • macOS 12.x
      1
    • Linux (specify distribution)
      3
    • Other
      6


Recommended Posts

Nice poll Frank.

 

I upgraded my main system to Windows 11 when it got offered in November or December but was frustrated by the changes to the desktop, Windows Explorer, Task bar and other things, especially that which forced me to "View more options" in order to get a context menu command to edit an image using Paint dotnet for example. It seems like Microsoft has gone the way of Facebook, forcing extra clicks and work in order to achieve tasks in the OS. Anyway I downgraded back to Windows 10 within the window allowed (just over a week) so I didn't have to start from scratch with a clean install. System is i9-9900K, AORUS Z390 WiFi Pro, 32GB DDR4, NVIDIA 2070 RTX SUPER (fully Windows 11 compliant).

 

Work laptop x360 HP Pavilion i5-7200U is not Windows 11 compliant so it is still on Windows 10.

At home both my computers are on 11 now. Desktop is completely vanilla as it's mostly used as an HTPC and laptop I have Start11 on. No real issues besides the wandering tooltip issue on the taskbar.

 

At work they still have us on Windows 10 1909. Even worse though, our on-the-phone agents are using a VMware Horizon Windows 7 32bit VDI environment still and it runs like crap. It's a non-persistent VDI session too and uses an app called 'Profile Unity' to redirect docs/desktop etc to our personal network share drive. Not a great setup. We're working on converting to AWS but we have a bunch of old apps that need rewritten first to be properly compliant.

I voted for Linux for both work and home. I voted in the work section although I am retired. Using Linux Mint 19.3 on 6 machines and 1 has Mint 20.3. 

 

Also have 3 computers that are on Windows 10. 1 of those is wife's computer. Keep Windows around just so I don't completely forget how to use it in case I need to help some one out.

  • Like 2

Windows 11 on both HTPC and Home / Gaming PC.
Windows 10 at work.

 

I've figured I rarely use the OS as an OS at home, mostly play games or back files up from my phone... and then from the PC to an external HDD every so often.

I can put up with Windows 11 for my use.


Although I have gotten use to the START button being placed in the middle now and quite like it.  It certainly saves me moving the mouse all the way to the bottom left corner.  But I also only use it to launch apps.  Windows 10 Start Menu was good.  If only I could group the icons and get rid of the recommended apps bit at the bottom, I'd be happy.  I don't actually click on good old "All Programs" or whatever it was in XP - complete waste of time (for MY usage).

10 on my home computers...desktop/notebook could be upgraded to 11 but I just don't see the point yet.

 

Work, depends.  Desktops are 10, one system on my camera uses XP, one uses 7 and the newer probe/well counter uses 10.

On 08/02/2022 at 09:46, Sir Topham Hatt said:

If only I could group the icons and get rid of the recommended apps bit at the bottom, I'd be happy.  I don't actually click on good old "All Programs" or whatever it was in XP - complete waste of time (for MY usage).

Start11 gives both those features on the 11 style menu if you don't mind a 3rd party app to get your functionality :) or heck you could even switch back to the 10 style menu with it if you desired

  • Like 1

I use Fedora 35 (Gnome) at home on my main rig right now but do also have Windows 10 Pro on a laptop. I work in IT and it's Windows 10 Ent there.

 

Gee, I hope no one is using Windows 7 or older as their primary OS. LOL

Edited by Good Bot, Bad Bot
On 08/02/2022 at 10:50, Mindovermaster said:

I'm using EndeavourOS (fork of Arch)

You forgot to end that sentence with BTW. LOL

Windows 10 at home, various different linux flavours at work as I use a variety of different workstations and servers throughout my day.

 

I want to love Windows 11, but there's certain issues that keep me from using it as a daily driver

Manjaro linux : Main reg :

3900x, 32gb 3600, 2x 1TB NVME, 2060Super

 

Laptop: Macbook Air M1 with Ubuntu server + KDE virtualized using UTM

 

RPI: official RPI OS 32 bit.Might upgrade

 

Thinking of selling the main reg as I dont game/use full potential (Linux is so  light) an might get a laptop with 5500 or 5700. You may help me choose here

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Posts

    • Apple finally brings the slider for Liquid Glass and many other changes by Aditya Tiwari Apple kicked off the official live stream of the WWDC 2026 annual developer event. The company began its latest wave of announcements with changes to the controversial Liquid Glass design language, which debuted last year across Apple's entire software ecosystem. A lot of people didn't like Liquid Glass when it first arrived on iPhone and other devices last year. The devices were plagued with transparency issues and whatnot. While Apple improved things over the year, it has now added a new Liquid Glass slider that lets you switch the transparency from clear to opaque. The sidebars now expand to the edge of the window. When you scroll the UI sideways, the refraction continues beneath the sidebar rather than being cut off at the boundary. Moreover, Apple has changed the way Liquid Glass is rendered across the system. There is a separation between different layers, which makes buttons in the toolbar stand out from the background. Apple said it "deeply appreciates" the feedback it received from users and has made adjustments to Liquid Glass.
    • FWIW, I've been using Helium on Linux and Windows since the first time it was mentioned here. Actually, maybe a day or 3 before, as I searched for it when I saw it mentioned on the MX Linux forums. Haven't had a single issue on either OS. Not bad for a beta.
    • See up until a few years ago y'all could get away with simply denying your war crimes, pretending it never happened. Unfortunately for you, it's the 2020s and Israel's genocide has been livestreamed in real time. You have to be dumber than a rock to think anyone still believes your propaganda. See the cat is already out of the bag. The world already knows who you are so do yourself a favor and just drop the facade. Bet it gets real tiring keep track of all the lies. Take some inspiration from Israeli ministers who boast on live TV they like massacring civilians. Every zionist accusation is after all a confession.
    • He's just reporting what Microsoft posted. https://msmessagecenter.com/MC1381119 It just means that Windows Defender updates will no longer be bundled into the monthly Cumulative Windows security update and will now be a separate download. They'll still be on Microsoft update of course but now they can be released faster.
    • Apple announces iOS 27 with no changes to the list of supported iPhones by Taras Buria At WWDC 2026 in Cupertino, Apple announced iOS 27, the next mobile operating system for compatible iPhones. The update focuses on tweaking and improving last year's iOS 26, particularly in areas like app launch time, Liquid Glass design, and more. Additionally, Apple has reworked Apple Maps with a significantly enhanced Flyover view for a much more realistic view. Apple also promises better performance, smarter search, new Health features, new parental controls, and more. The most important part is that iOS 27 is compatible with all iPhones that can run iOS 26. That means that even the seven-year-old iPhone 11 can run iOS 27 (supposedly better than iOS 26). iOS 27 will be available this Fall, with the first developer betas expected later today. You can follow the live stream here.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      507
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      238
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      80
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      78
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      73
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!