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Windows 7 or Windows 10?

Avalonthas

Junior Member
In the process of putting together a new mid range gaming computer in an HTPC form factor for my condo's TV entertainment unit to play single player games on the television. I have been running Windows 7 since its inception and never gave Windows 8 a look as I did not want to deviate from the traditional Windows GUI.

Now that Windows 7 is on the dated side (I still prefer the GUI) I am debating if I want to transition to Windows 10. I am not a fan of the start menu and other ways the OS has been organised and since we will be with Windows 7 at work for some years to come, I have no pressing need to familiarise with WIN10.

However are there any compelling reasons to shift to Windows 10 from the perspective of gaming efficiency or HTPC use (I just download movies to a NAS and use GOM Player to play them on the HTPC to the TV, my uses are basic in that respect). Will using Windows 7 prevent me from taking advantage of any core technology advancements that will assist me get more out of the PC?
  • Silverstone Grandia GD09 HTPC Case
  • Asrock AB350M Pro4 Motherboard
  • AMD Ryzen 1600 CPU
  • Crucial Ballistix Elite DDR4-3000 16GB
  • Crucial 480GB BX300 SSD
  • Gigabyte GeForce GTX 970 G1 Gaming 4GB
  • 650 Watt Power Supply
 
I wouldn't buy win7 at this point, but if you already have it, why not? Try it, and upgrade later if you're missing out.
 
Changes are always difficult. Windows 10 is different, but it is a great OS and you will get used to it very quickly. I would definitely get windows 10 if I were you.
 
(I just download movies to a NAS and use GOM Player to play them on the HTPC to the TV, my uses are basic in that respect). Will using Windows 7 prevent me from taking advantage of any core technology advancements that will assist me get more out of the PC?

No
 
Well, other than the fact that a Ryzen CPU is "unsupported" in Windows 7, you'll be fine. Might need to patch Windows Update, to get it to work with the Ryzen CPU, though.
 
i upgraded from windows 7 and you need to do research on getting the most out of windows 10. windows 10 is faster than windows 7 and it's fast to use as well.
 
I basically did the same thing as the OP.

the only differences are:
I5 haswell system
R9 280 video card
Win 8.1 wmc with classic shell

I have it linked to my steam account and play such things are Doom3, Bioshock 1 & 2 and Infinite.

Win 8.1 supports directx 11 while win 7 doesn't.
 
I basically did the same thing as the OP.

the only differences are:
I5 haswell system
R9 280 video card
Win 8.1 wmc with classic shell

I have it linked to my steam account and play such things are Doom3, Bioshock 1 & 2 and Infinite.

Win 8.1 supports directx 11 while win 7 doesn't.

windows 7 and 8.1 both support DX11 and lack DX12 support.
 
In the process of putting together a new mid range gaming computer in an HTPC form factor for my condo's TV entertainment unit to play single player games on the television. I have been running Windows 7 since its inception and never gave Windows 8 a look as I did not want to deviate from the traditional Windows GUI.

Now that Windows 7 is on the dated side (I still prefer the GUI) I am debating if I want to transition to Windows 10. I am not a fan of the start menu and other ways the OS has been organised and since we will be with Windows 7 at work for some years to come, I have no pressing need to familiarise with WIN10.

However are there any compelling reasons to shift to Windows 10 from the perspective of gaming efficiency or HTPC use (I just download movies to a NAS and use GOM Player to play them on the HTPC to the TV, my uses are basic in that respect). Will using Windows 7 prevent me from taking advantage of any core technology advancements that will assist me get more out of the PC?
  • Silverstone Grandia GD09 HTPC Case
  • Asrock AB350M Pro4 Motherboard
  • AMD Ryzen 1600 CPU
  • Crucial Ballistix Elite DDR4-3000 16GB
  • Crucial 480GB BX300 SSD
  • Gigabyte GeForce GTX 970 G1 Gaming 4GB
  • 650 Watt Power Supply

Well, let us examine the situation, because I have been in a similar boat. If you aren't counting on Windows Media Center for "Live TV," you have greater freedom. For those of us who do, we know we have maybe 3 years of support left for Win 7. We are conflicted about moving to Win10 -- which neither has-- nor supports -- Media Center. For certain types of Cable-TV network tuners like HD HomeRun Prime, Media Center may be the only means of accessing encrypted premium channels and recording programs from them. SiliconDust is midwifing a "HDHR DVR" project which runs in Windows 10 and which currently will display premium content but will not record it (but I should check again its status).

In your case, you download movies and use another player. If the player or something similar runs on Windows 10, then there is no problem. If you don't rely on a cable-TV subscription with premiums, you have no worry about moving to Win 10 irreversibly.

I chose instead to create a dual-boot configuration for Win7/Win10, partly for the reasons one can infer from my description. I now work more with Win 10 on that system, and maybe visit Win 7 at boot-time about once or twice monthly.

So at this point, I have both feet planted on Windows 10 ground. "Classic Shell" in Win 10 fits my Windows-7 habitual comfort level. I grow less and less annoyed about finding the features I know in a Win 7 context when I need them in Win 10.
 
I bought a used dell and it had 10 pro and is set up just to be like win 7. I like win 10 and for once I am not 3 years behind on the OS.
 
For what it is worth, I migrated all my win 7/8 machines to VMs and replaced the physical machines with win 10.

While I still don't like some of the things win 10 does (which I block), for the most part, I have had no issues to speak of.
 
you might as well get windows 10 because it's better than windows 7 by a mile. i went from windows 7 to windows 10 and i would never go back to windows 7.
 
Well, other than the fact that a Ryzen CPU is "unsupported" in Windows 7, you'll be fine. Might need to patch Windows Update, to get it to work with the Ryzen CPU, though.
except...at best that's temporary. Windows 7 is end of life in March 2020 which is less than 2.5 years. After that it goes the way of XP. No more updates no matter how you back it.

For anyone where the UI is your reason for not upgrading, just pay the $5.00 for Start 10.
 
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