IT departments will do anything they can to avoid upgrades. I remember my High School was using a version of Windows Multipoint Server 2012 (With Classic Shell and Chrome Pre-installed) to make 2 "computers" from each tower. It was kinda a crazy idea but it somehow worked.
Yeah but the kernel version number isn't changed for any specific reasons other than Microsoft feeling like it. Windows 8.1 was 6.3, and during the insider phase of Windows 10 they didn't change the version number to 10 until much later in the development cycle. During much of the pre-release...
These have both been submitted on feedback hub (consider upvoting them).
https://aka.ms/AAdbgsa
https://aka.ms/AAdbabp
The first issue is caused by things that usually try to steal focus and be on top. Things like the ShareX screenshot selection. I started using the built in screenshot program...
What's the appeal of this over something like Shadow? They're both "cloud PCs" but shadow is focused on gaming, and cheaper.
I guess there is the business side but it's still so expensive...
I actually love the new settings UI, my only real dislike about it is that the back button should be somewhere besides the top right corner of the window.
I think a big part of the creation of Windows 11 is the realization that you can't exactly discontinue things or make sweeping changes on an incremental update. With a major update, the expectation that big changes are going to be made is baked in... while with non-major updates people expect...
I feel like a lot of people think that they *have* to have Windows 11 or else. This isn't exactly the case. Windows 10 still has official support from Microsoft until 2025 and will likely have third party support until 2030... and regardless, by the time we get to that date your 6 year old...