Comment Re:Planned obsole[sce]nce as a business strategy (Score 2) 91
The Windows OS passed the point of my actual OS-level requirements many years ago. I've been using Windows for a LONG time, way too long, and I am really hard pressed to remember the last new feature that I needed at the OS level. Perhaps TCP/IP support back in Windows 95? Yes, I know that's hard to assess, because I would agree that my computers have gotten more useful and more powerful, and some of that is due to OS-level improvements that are making my application software run faster, but... On balance I strongly believe that a much smaller OS could deliver what I want faster, and with fewer security vulnerabilities.
For all of the MANY, MANY, MANY annoying things that have been added to Windows over the years that make its use a begrudging concession rather than enthusiastic selection, I will see what things I can concede were added to Windows that were genuinely useful since TCP/IP was added in Windows 95...
1. 64-bit support (would you really want to be using 4GB of RAM in 2025?).
2. Desktop compositing (transparency, shadows, variable DPI support, GPU acceleration).
3. Memory management (no more one-app-crashes the OS).
4. Better account and multi-user support (remember that Windows 95 allows you to get past the login prompt by clicking 'cancel'; UAC was off to a bumpy start but running applications in a user context rather than an admin context by default was a net positive all around).
5. Overall disk support (SATA, NVMe, >137GB drive sizes, and on a tangential note, UEFI support).
6. Overall improvements to the hardware abstraction layer and class compliant drivers (Remember how many hardware drivers you had to install in Windows 95? Around a dozen, probably...but it's 2-3 at most on Win11...and not that it's a generally-useful thing, but cloning a hard drive to dissimilar hardware works WAY better than even the Win7 era).
7. Networking improvements (IPv6 support, Windows Firewall, SMB 3.0, optional NFS support).
8. DirectX improvements (90's era games have their own look and a nostalgia feel, but games that look like Cyberpunk simply weren't possible on DirectX 2.0).
9. Peripheral support (USB 4.0 is a bit sluggish out of the gate...but do you REALLY want to go back to the bad-old-days of SCSI, Parallel ports, and 12Mbit/sec USB 1.1?).
There are a bunch of more specific ones (Windows Media Center was the BEST cable box to ever exist and it is a CRIME that none of the OEMs ever mass produced a PC as a purpose-built DVR), and of course there are 10,001 security fixes that have been implemented since then, but those are just a handful of Windows improvements that I'd at least give credit where it's due.