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I've tried it on 3 machines, all rolled back to windows 10 because of how bad windows 11 is.
If Microsoft is serious about abandoning support for windows 10 later this year, then all 3 of those machines are going to be linux like the rest of my computers.
Also skill issue? It's an OS not a game of Halo.
It reminds me of when Days Gone launched on Steam. Published by $on¥, the game included spyware. Before you could start playing, you were presented with two options on how much access $on¥ would have to your data, without any way to opt out entirely. Discussions about this surfaced on the community hub, but many defended $on¥'s practices, arguing that 'everyone is spying on you' and suggesting you shouldn't even own a smartphone if you dislike being tracked.
By that logic, shouldn't we apply the same reasoning to Windows and just accept that, yes, everyone is spying on you? Or does $on¥ have a special right to do this?
most linux desktop environments are so easy nowadays
you don't have to be trapped in the micro$oft thing, have alternatives