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Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: robomatic Date: 12 Oct 23 - 02:17 PM Just yesterday saw a 14TB Seagate HD in Costco. Holy Hannah. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: Stilly River Sage Date: 10 Oct 23 - 11:28 PM The Amazon Prime sale this week has given a half-off price on a 16T external backup drive, so I'll set it up to do a full backup (setting aside the smaller-capacity drive I have used) and then I'll see about updating to Windows 11. I didn't want to try it until I had a new full backup. It's a good way to kill a weekend. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: EBarnacle Date: 16 Oct 23 - 07:59 AM Lady Hillary and I are the cadre at our regional rummage sale computer department. A customer came in, tire kicking, and we discussed his needs. He had, a day or two previously, purchased a refurbished Windows 10 computer on eBay with a 500 gig hard drive for $350. He realized, after our discussion, that a: it was overpriced and b: since he stores almost everything in the cloud, he really does not need that large a hard drive. He ended up purchasing two 320 gig laptops @ $120 each and deciding to send back the other. Unless you really need a lot of storage, a large hd is an affectation. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: DaveRo Date: 11 Oct 23 - 04:35 AM No hurry: Not even the ghost of obsolescence can coerce users onto Windows 11 |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: Stilly River Sage Date: 25 Oct 23 - 12:55 PM I want a hard drive to store the entire OS and data so the thing can be restored with everything installed. You can't do that kind of backup on the cloud (at least not that I've found - if one exists, please tell me). I store my photos on the cloud (in space I rent annually at Microsoft). |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 25 Oct 23 - 09:29 AM Techie Warning: > Modern large drives are supposed to have gone to SMR (shingle > magnetic recording) Or HAMR (heat-assisted), or possibly both in the same drive. > Unless you really need a lot of storage, a large hd is an affectation. *Agree*. The problem here is that, once people have a huge drive, they neglect (and then forget) to throw away date-expired data, and then back up everything "just in case". I know I do. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 From: Stilly River Sage Date: 20 Dec 23 - 05:58 PM Aha! A whiff of news about Windows 12 (you know they were going to do it!) Windows 12 FAQ: Yes, it's coming in 2024 (and more surprising predictions) Microsoft isn't talking, but I've collected rumors, speculation, and wild-ass guesses about the next version of Windows in this FAQ to help you get ready. From ZDNet
Well, Windows as a Service was fun while it lasted. Microsoft buried that idea once and for all with the release of Windows 11 in 2021. And judging by the latest crop of rumors, it appears we're now back on a schedule that includes a new major version of Windows every three years. Next up: Windows 12, sometime in 2024. I don't usually do a long copy/paste of these articles, but sometimes they go away, so I thought I'd keep the whole thing here for reference. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 27 Dec 23 - 02:56 PM Running this up to the top again with a hint of the change in the title. Does anyone else tend to skip an OS with Windows and do every other one? |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Ed. Date: 28 Dec 23 - 02:15 PM Does anyone else tend to skip an OS with Windows and do every other one? It's not a strategy that I've ever used, although I've missed a couple along the way. It might be a good idea, but that depends where you started, I think. If you'd decided to install Windows ME, ignored XP, went straight to Vista, followed by Windows 8, then possibly not... |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 28 Dec 23 - 02:30 PM You're right about that! I skipped ME (used Win2000/NT), never had Vista, kept Win7 in play a long time so mostly skipped Win8, and am still using Win10. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: DaveRo Date: 29 Dec 23 - 03:49 AM I've never seen Windows 11, but from what I've read it seems not to be so much an operating system - for running programs or apps - but more an advertising platform. Microsoft makes most of its money (from ordinary PC buyers, as opposed to businesses) from selling cloud services and subscription software - such as One Drive and Office 365 - so it pushes people into using those. Google obviously does the same with ChromeOS, of course. Does Apple? Dunno; I haven't used a Mac since the original one in the 80's. But my impression is that MacOS is the nearest thing to an Operating System these days. I'm not sure when this first happened. Win 8? My wife runs Win 10 and it offers weather forecasts (useless) and 'suggests' content she 'might like', which is irritating and intrusive. It's still possible to run without a Microsoft Account, but it needs extra work. Microsoft is investing heavily in AI, and that piece about Windows 12 suggests that AI might be the main reason for its (apparantly) sudden appearance. Microsoft are building PCs with Neural Processing Units (NPUs) to speed up AI. What AI? In Windows itself? So you need an operating system to support new hardware which is used by ... the operating system? What's the benefit for the PC user? The only reason my wife needs Windows (she ran Linux for 3 months at my suggestion) is for Powerpoint; the LibreOffice equivalent, Impress, is just not good enough. Hopefully she'll stop needing that before the end of 2025. The 2012 laptop is still working fine. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 01 Jan 24 - 03:09 PM From PC Magazine: Microsoft Needs to Get Serious About Its Windows 10 Upgrade Problem By October 2025, more than a billion PCs will be running a dead operating system, leaving many computers vulnerable to malware or headed for the trash. What's Microsoft going to do about it? The Windows 10-pocalypse is a short two years away. On Oct. 14, 2025, Microsoft will stop issuing security updates for Windows 10 PCs, at which point most of the world’s PCs—about one billion computers—will be running a dead operating system, like Windows XP. And most of those computers can't upgrade to Windows 11. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 07 Aug 25 - 12:19 PM I still haven't updated my desktop computer to Win11, but the date is rapidly approaching. It is eligible for the upgrade (can handle it) but my 12-year-old Sony VIAO won't manage the upgrade. It has some software that I don't want to lose, so I'm not planning to do anything to it. I know we have Linux users on the 'cat, so this question is aimed at you. I've read a couple of things saying those older computers could be set up with Linux to continue use, instead of being recycled and replacements purchased for Windows users. I haven't put any partitions on that laptop, but I suppose I could; would there be any point in setting up a dual-boot system if I don't have the original disks to reinstall the software (Adobe products, right before they went to online subscriptions only). Could the Linux software see and use software store in the Windows environment? |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: DaveRo Date: 07 Aug 25 - 01:14 PM Stilly River Sage wrote: Could the Linux software see and use software store in the Windows environment?Short answer: no. Linux could see the data on the Windows disks, but could not run the programs, which will only run under Windows. If you have the Windows installation disks/installer files then you could run them in a virtual Windows machine within Linux (or under 'Wine'), but that's much more complicated. If you avoid connecting the machine to the internet then you can just continue to run Win 10 on it. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 07 Aug 25 - 01:41 PM That's probably the fate of this machine. Thing is, this is the backup machine for in case the big one needs work (that does happen occasionally) or if I had to go find a WiFi signal somewhere when cable is out of service here. I don't know if I want another laptop to be the spare that I don't use often. I already have the old desktop that stopped communicating with the Internet (I fixed it a couple of times and that was all Windows would allow - I didn't want to reinstall Windows and lose the software to get it back online). So I connect it to the main desktop using a transfer cable after doing my work on the software (same as on the laptop). The laptop would become another such machine. The department of Redundancy department. I have an Android tablet and can use it with a Bluetooth mouse and keyboard, but it is clunky and slow. But I suppose that will be the backup for now. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: DaveRo Date: 08 Aug 25 - 12:26 PM You can put it off for a year by subscribing to Microsoft's ESUs: Microsoft's $30 Windows 10 Security Updates Cover 10 Devices But you have to agree to a Faustian pact with Microsoft - open an account. I'm guessing that you'd have too much data to qualify for the free option. |
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Subject: RE: Tech: They lied, Here's Windows 11 - (12!) From: Stilly River Sage Date: 08 Aug 25 - 12:53 PM I pay for an account already. I could use the productivity software free through my university but I wanted online storage for photos and the amount I get with Microsoft is about $70 a year, less than DropBox and other places. Yeah, I know about that year extension. It needs looking into - at the end of the year, then what? No support, or they brick it? |
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