Nah, Windows XP and 7 get a pass. These were solid consumer OS’s.
You go back 30 years and you’re at Windows 95 (holy shit) and the beginning of massive home PC adoption.
I don’t feel they got hostile towards users until probably midway through Windows 10 lifecycle. The first half wasn’t that bad, aside from changing up 20+ years of muscle-memory…but Gnome did that, too.
For me it started going south just after Windows 2000. XP started ‘thinking’ for you, forced online activation and hid all the settings away in little fluffy Fischer Price boxes. That was the point that your computer started not belonging to you, in my opinion.
Nah, Windows XP and 7 get a pass. These were solid consumer OS’s.
You go back 30 years and you’re at Windows 95 (holy shit) and the beginning of massive home PC adoption.
I don’t feel they got hostile towards users until probably midway through Windows 10 lifecycle. The first half wasn’t that bad, aside from changing up 20+ years of muscle-memory…but Gnome did that, too.
For me it started going south just after Windows 2000. XP started ‘thinking’ for you, forced online activation and hid all the settings away in little fluffy Fischer Price boxes. That was the point that your computer started not belonging to you, in my opinion.