Recommended Posts

On 21/01/2023 at 11:41, Steven P. said:

Sorry but when the changes make you less productive then it is not a user fault. Stop being an apologist for a megacorp that's out of touch and pushes bad ideas on end users that they ultimately are forced (at least in part) to backtrack on.

Steven, I'd expect professionalism out of you as you are a founder and an Administrator. If this is how you represent the company, then this lowers the bar in Neowin's reputation. Throwing judgements at me by calling me an apologist is the most unprofessional reaction I've heard this week. Look, in my original post I was calling the person out as there are so many people whining and complaining that something is hindering their productivity when in reality it is just an illusion that they created. People who don't create these illusions will always find ways to get around the problem while reporting their feedback through the correct channels. Plus, they would rather positively learn from an argument rather than negatively rebel against it.

I did install Windows 11 to have a peak, a few times to be honest, Windows 11 is not supported on this machine, but I had a peak. I put it on last week for a few days, but gone back to Windows 10.  At some point this machine will go belly up and I will have to put a different board and CPU in, but still not going to update to Windows 11, in the next month or so this machine will go into in semi retirement :).

 

On 22/01/2023 at 00:49, ad47uk said:

I did install Windows 11 to have a peak, a few times to be honest, Windows 11 is not supported on this machine, but I had a peak. I put it on last week for a few days, but gone back to Windows 10.  At some point this machine will go belly up and I will have to put a different board and CPU in, but still not going to update to Windows 11, in the next month or so this machine will go into in semi retirement :).

 

I respect what you are saying here. It doesn't sound negative, and, in your case, it makes sense. I'm on the Insiders Beta channel and I'm seeing some cool changes and features. Anyway, hopefully you'll give it a shot again a year or so from now. 🙂

On 22/01/2023 at 09:47, jesseinsf said:

Steven, I'd expect professionalism out of you as you are a founder and an Administrator. If this is how you represent the company, then this lowers the bar in Neowin's reputation. Throwing judgements at me by calling me an apologist is the most unprofessional reaction I've heard this week. Look, in my original post I was calling the person out as there are so many people whining and complaining that something is hindering their productivity when in reality it is just an illusion that they created. People who don't create these illusions will always find ways to get around the problem while reporting their feedback through the correct channels. Plus, they would rather positively learn from an argument rather than negatively rebel against it.

So you're allowed to call people ignorant for not accepting change, but I am not allowed to point out the very real backtracking Microsoft has had to do because of dumb decisions they made with Windows 11?

Riiiiighht...  :p 

Do not use my status as "founder and an Administrator" here to assume that I'm not allowed to have an opinion, it doesn't work like that.

On 22/01/2023 at 08:58, jesseinsf said:

I respect what you are saying here. It doesn't sound negative, and, in your case, it makes sense. I'm on the Insiders Beta channel and I'm seeing some cool changes and features. Anyway, hopefully you'll give it a shot again a year or so from now. 🙂

There are things I like about Windows 11, I kind of like the start menu, it is far better than the tiles on Windows 10, just a shame the search bar can not be got rid of and the gap when recommended is turned off. The other thing is the push to use Edge and Bing, which is what Ms is doing in Windows 10, but not as much. The forced MS account on new installs, I used Rufus to make a instalation and then updated this machine that way, so no MS account.

When I say this machine is going into semi retirement it is because I am looking at a Mac mini, I have been waiting for Apple to update the M1 mini, and now they have to a M2, I realise I will have to get used to the MAxc way of doing things, but even Apple don't force their Apple Id onto people, push yes, force now.  It is going to be strange, but the Mac mini uses a lot less power than my PC and yet will do most of what I need with ease. Not seen a x86 machine that can do that .

i will still keep the Windows machine for a few games I play. But I doubt very much if I will ever update to Windows 11 unless I hate the Mac and if I do then that will be an expensive mistake, so I will have to love the MAc :)

 

On 22/01/2023 at 03:35, Steven P. said:

So you're allowed to call people ignorant for not accepting change, but I am not allowed to point out the very real backtracking Microsoft has had to do because of dumb decisions they made with Windows 11?

Riiiiighht...  :p 

Do not use my status as "founder and an Administrator" here to assume that I'm not allowed to have an opinion, it doesn't work like that.

On top of that, what you said wasn't unprofessional anyway.  I read it more than once just to double check if I missed something.  

My hardware is supported and I've tried it a few times, but in my personal opinion it also feels like a downgrade to me.

Aesthetics aside, there are some parts of the OS as well as in some cases performance issues (especially at first) that made it feel I was going back to the heady days of Vista.  The settings app for example feels clunky to me and just like the right-click menu it's like I'm having to do more to get the same results in 11 than I did in 10.  That doesn't sound like forward progress.

I follow the news here and on other sites and YT channels and install it when big updates comes out, but I find myself going back to 10 in a few days each time.  

It just feels like its still in beta to me.

Now YMMV and if it works for you, then congratz! But it seems I'm not alone and maybe if there is anyone left in Redmond they should listen....at least a little.

  • Like 2
On 22/01/2023 at 01:47, jesseinsf said:

Steven, I'd expect professionalism out of you as you are a founder and an Administrator. If this is how you represent the company, then this lowers the bar in Neowin's reputation. Throwing judgements at me by calling me an apologist is the most unprofessional reaction I've heard this week. Look, in my original post I was calling the person out as there are so many people whining and complaining that something is hindering their productivity when in reality it is just an illusion that they created. People who don't create these illusions will always find ways to get around the problem while reporting their feedback through the correct channels. Plus, they would rather positively learn from an argument rather than negatively rebel against it.

Seeing the ways you’ve attacked me and others for being critical of MS, I would say @Steven P. is spot on in what he said. Suck it up buttercup. 

On 21/01/2023 at 13:38, jesseinsf said:

It's not a downgrade, it is the lack of accepting change. Accepting change is psychologically an important part of a healthy mind. Just because you can't move the taskbar to all four corners of the screen or the lack of available choices in the context menus doesn't mean that it is a downgrade. The context menus are like that because the apps you install don't like the thought of change either. Looks like you are partially fighting your own kind.

Wouldn't it not make more sense for MS to let you chose what you want there, several things I never use and those I do not there,then left hoping that more than one 3rd party updates to fit to MS's changes (and that's only if those programs are still being developed) rather than MS make it possible to make whatever fit to the users needs show.  no one in their right mind would think all change is good and it's foolish to even think so anyone with any common sense knows not all changes are good and bad changes should not be accepted and in a tool that should be making my life\work\enjoyment easier, making it more effort is just rubbish design.  (not just the right click menu, hard to get to all program, harder to set one program as a default (both were easier in 10) just to name a few design flaws or arguably designs more pushed by marketing rather than good design.

 

  • Like 2
On 22/01/2023 at 01:35, Steven P. said:

So you're allowed to call people ignorant for not accepting change, but I am not allowed to point out the very real backtracking Microsoft has had to do because of dumb decisions they made with Windows 11?

Riiiiighht...  :p 

Do not use my status as "founder and an Administrator" here to assume that I'm not allowed to have an opinion, it doesn't work like that.

Correct as you are a founder and an employee. People like you are supposed to give warnings, not feed the flame.

On 22/01/2023 at 17:31, Dadwen said:

Wouldn't it not make more sense for MS to let you chose what you want there, several things I never use and those I do not there,then left hoping that more than one 3rd party updates to fit to MS's changes (and that's only if those programs are still being developed) rather than MS make it possible to make whatever fit to the users needs show.  no one in their right mind would think all change is good and it's foolish to even think so anyone with any common sense knows not all changes are good and bad changes should not be accepted and in a tool that should be making my life\work\enjoyment easier, making it more effort is just rubbish design.  (not just the right click menu, hard to get to all program, harder to set one program as a default (both were easier in 10) just to name a few design flaws or arguably designs more pushed by marketing rather than good design.

 

One of the problems i did have with Windows 11 was not being able to move the task bar, I prefer mine at the top of the screen, it is the way I have had things since Windows 95. Menus aare also a pin. 

But since i am looking at chaging platforms, I will have to get ujsed to a different OS that does things differently

 

 

 

On 23/01/2023 at 03:35, ad47uk said:

One of the problems i did have with Windows 11 was not being able to move the task bar, I prefer mine at the top of the screen, it is the way I have had things since Windows 95. Menus aare also a pin. 

But since i am looking at chaging platforms, I will have to get ujsed to a different OS that does things differently

 

 

 

For the longest time that was one of the most requested "feedback"  *till some odd rearrangement they did (call me shocked) but still in the top 5 and I still have a few people at work that refuse to do 11 with out the "combine taskbar button" options.

  • Like 1
On 23/01/2023 at 02:35, ad47uk said:

One of the problems i did have with Windows 11 was not being able to move the task bar, I prefer mine at the top of the screen, it is the way I have had things since Windows 95. Menus aare also a pin. 

But since i am looking at chaging platforms, I will have to get ujsed to a different OS that does things differently

 

 

 

https://github.com/valinet/ExplorerPatcher

fixes everything ;)

 

I also have my taskbar on top, with windows 11.

On 23/01/2023 at 12:05, Dadwen said:

For the longest time that was one of the most requested "feedback"  *till some odd rearrangement they did (call me shocked) but still in the top 5 and I still have a few people at work that refuse to do 11 with out the "combine taskbar button" options.

Very strange that Ms ignored it.

 

On 23/01/2023 at 14:24, nekrosoft13 said:

https://github.com/valinet/ExplorerPatcher

fixes everything ;)

 

I also have my taskbar on top, with windows 11.

I had the taskbar on the top as well, but the start menu acted strange when left in the centre, in that the icons on the taskbar would still be in the centre., but the start menu would only open on the left-hand side. 

On 23/01/2023 at 14:30, Kikitheking92007 said:

No, sticking with Windows 10 (LTSC 2021)

I did want to use that, but MS made it difficult, i did try it for a while, but I did not trust it.

 

Notebook  and desktop (Home on the portable side and Pro for Workstations on the desktop due to the LACK of issues).  I recommended Microsoft 365 became Office 365 Personal - I stil recommend it = in fact more than ever because of whatit brings  to the rest of Windows.

Windows has always been a work in progress. Unlike Apple's IOS and MacOS interface, which will look the same 100-years from now. Anyway, instead of whining and complaining, we should be giving feedback where the right people hear it. With Windows, we are either the average user, or we are beta testers (There is not an in-between).

On 23/01/2023 at 19:10, jesseinsf said:

Windows has always been a work in progress. Unlike Apple's IOS and MacOS interface, which will look the same 100-years from now. Anyway, instead of whining and complaining, we should be giving feedback where the right people hear it. With Windows, we are either the average user, or we are beta testers (There is not an in-between).

 

running insiders and also in the feedback hub, people giving feedback, example: please let us remove the recommended if it's empty.... MS month's later... ya we hear you it's now able to be made smaller.....

🤦‍♂️

The moving of the task bar for the longest time (almost since feedback for 11 had been up), was in the top 1-5 things asked for and most up-voted....

giving the right people feedback does not seem to be working too well......

On 23/01/2023 at 17:10, jesseinsf said:

Windows has always been a work in progress. Unlike Apple's IOS and MacOS interface, which will look the same 100-years from now. Anyway, instead of whining and complaining, we should be giving feedback where the right people hear it. With Windows, we are either the average user, or we are beta testers (There is not an in-between).

You mean like the Feedback hub that is regularly ignored?

 

I will take something that doesn't change a lot in the looks department as long as the quality is there. MS has lost the plot on both. Inconsistent looks and they do not have quality. Oh and they use random people for their QA, that they then ignore. What could go wrong?

 

Leghumping MS is not going to accomplish anything; they deserve to hear and feel the criticism where possible.

 

The person that had the bright idea to use the scaled down interface from Windows 10X as Windows 11's "main feature" (dumbed down taskbar and Start) should be fired.

They literally stripped away all that was good with the taskbar and Start (but absolutely made sense for handheld devices) and then bigged it up as some great new thing. It's lazy and like others keep saying, completely out of touch with users. Why bother collecting all the telemetry they do if they are not going to use it properly?

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
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Fresh CachyOS install with Niri - I guess it's a little orange, but I'm working on it
    • FastStone Image Viewer 8.5 by Razvan Serea FastStone Image Viewer is a fast, stable, user-friendly image browser, converter and editor. It has a nice array of features that include image viewing, management, comparison, red-eye removal, emailing, resizing, cropping, retouching and color adjustments. Its innovative but intuitive full-screen mode provides quick access to EXIF information, thumbnail browser and major functionalities via hidden toolbars that pop up when your mouse touches the four edges of the screen. Other features include a high quality magnifier and a musical slideshow with 150+ transitional effects, as well as lossless JPEG transitions, drop shadow effects, image annotation, scanner support, histogram and much more. It supports all major graphic formats (BMP, JPEG, JPEG 2000, animated GIF, PNG, PCX, PSD, EPS, TIFF, WMF, ICO and TGA) and popular digital camera RAW formats (CRW, CR2, NEF, PEF, RAF, MRW, ORF, SRF, ARW, SR2, RW2 and DNG). FastStone Image Viewer features: Image browser and viewer with a familiar Windows Explorer-like user interface Support for many popular image formats and PDF viewing True Full Screen viewer with convenient image zoom support and unique fly-out menu panels Crystal-clear and customizable one-click image magnifier Powerful image editing tools: Resize/resample, rotate/flip, crop, sharpen/blur, adjust lighting/colors/curves/levels etc. Eleven re-sampling algorithms to choose from when resizing images Image color effects: gray scale, sepia, negative, Red/Green/Blue adjustment Image special effects: drop shadow, framing, bump map, sketch, oil painting, lens Draw texts, lines, highlights, rectangles, ovals and callout objects on images Clone Stamp and Healing Brush Superior red-eye effect removal/reduction with completely natural looking end result Multi-level Undo/Redo capability Single click to switch between best fit and actual size mode Image management, including file tagging, rating and drag-and-drop to copy/move/re-arrange files Histogram display with color counter feature Compare images side-by-side (up to 4 at a time) to easily cull those forgettable shots Image EXIF metadata support (plus comment editing for JPEGs) Configurable batch processing to convert/rename large or small collections of images Slideshow with 150+ transition effects and music support (MP3, WMA, WAV...) Create efficient image attachments for emailing to family and friends Print images with full page-layout control Create fully configurable contact sheets Create memorable artistic image montages from your family photos for personalized desktop wallpapers (Wallpaper Anywhere) Acquire images from scanners. Support batch scanning to PDF, TIFF, JPEG and PNG Versatile screen capture capability Powerful Save As interface to compare image quality and control generated file size Run favorite external editors with one keystroke from within Image Viewer Offer portable version of the program which can be run from a removable storage device Configurable mouse wheel support Support themes (bright, gray and dark) Support dual-monitor configurations Support touch interface (tap, swipe, pinch) Support dual instances Play video and audio files (Third party codecs may be required for old versions of Windows) And much more... FastStone Image Viewer 8.5 changelog: Added support for SVG format Added Start importing automatically and Handle duplicate file names automatically options to the Import Photos and Videos tool WebP files can now be rotated and saved with a single click Enhanced dark theme support in the PDF viewer Fixed a bug where some links in PDF files were not clickable Other improvements and bug fixes Download: FastStone Image Viewer 8.5 | Portable | ~15.0 MB (Freeware) View: FastStone Image Viewer Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Yup, broke my comp… again. its times like this when I regret AMD. This just never happens on NV.
    • Huh? You're delusional calling the Steam Deck dead. It is so successful that it has sold out multiple times. Even after the price hike this year it sold out again with 24 hours of being back in stock. The demand is real and has not died down even after four years.
    • Same place "Unreal III" is, in everyone's thoughts!
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      460
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      160
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      85
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!