- May 19, 2011
- 20,996
- 16,241
- 136
I ripped the poll idea off from another thread
As for why I didn't include earlier versions (for example, NT4 was the first version of Windows I liked), there's no huge rhyme or reason for it.
If I could stay on Win7 with security updates, I'd seriously consider it. As far as I'm concerned, Windows went downhill after that. Windows 8x's horrible UI changes that 'forgot' its primary audience (non-touchscreen users) mark it down in my book yet given the choice between 8x and 10, I'm drawn towards 8x just getting security updates these days. Win10: It works a lot better with an SSD but it still wants to ramble on in the background with all kinds of rubbish like telemetry, metro app updates, installing apps and updates without consent, peddling stuff I'm just not interested in (MS accounts, OneDrive subs, etc). The only reason I have WIn10 installed as my gaming OS (primary OS for me since migrating from Win7 is Linux) is because I assume DX12 is going to be relevant for my gaming needs some day. For me, if the user doesn't have an SSD, Win10 is another Vista in performance terms.
If I could stay on Win7 with security updates, I'd seriously consider it. As far as I'm concerned, Windows went downhill after that. Windows 8x's horrible UI changes that 'forgot' its primary audience (non-touchscreen users) mark it down in my book yet given the choice between 8x and 10, I'm drawn towards 8x just getting security updates these days. Win10: It works a lot better with an SSD but it still wants to ramble on in the background with all kinds of rubbish like telemetry, metro app updates, installing apps and updates without consent, peddling stuff I'm just not interested in (MS accounts, OneDrive subs, etc). The only reason I have WIn10 installed as my gaming OS (primary OS for me since migrating from Win7 is Linux) is because I assume DX12 is going to be relevant for my gaming needs some day. For me, if the user doesn't have an SSD, Win10 is another Vista in performance terms.