It's kinda hard to explain. MS ISOs are like the end-point. The UUP to ISO creation is not much different than MS's procedure that it uses. I've explained it before, but the way that MS integrates updates into ISOs is much different than the way it allows users to integrate updates into an ISO. When a user integrates a cumulative update, for example, it often needs to set a pending flag and process some update files on a live system. On a MS ISO it doesn't need to do this. It skips all the way to the end of that process and treats it as if it is at the end of update processing. It also skips the subsequent laggy background archiving that your system does on the first boot because it didn't have pending updates. It's better, but unless there are so many updates that it is updating gigabytes of files, you probably won't notice a different on most systems. I notice because I pay attention to that sort of thing, but I'm weird like that.
I gonna ask, i got laptop with i5-5200U CPU and if i check TPM status shows that i have TPM 2.0 module. So can i install Win 11 without bypass?
Are these known bugs? When using the Control Panel address bar to navigate to some other place the old ribbon and context menu return; When hiding the taskbar, trying to bring it up by sliding the mouse pointer in the so called "taskbar corner" area (or the good ole systray) fails to do so.
I hope someday they'll remove recommended when not needed, takes a lot of space for nothing. But for sure windows 11 is good but for some games like Assassins Creed Valhalla that don't launch what a petty.
Is there some reason why you don't just double click the icon? Or even right click and Open With if it's a file type you don't want to associate with one particular program?
Because this doesn't achieve the same thing of simply dragging and dropping one of (for example on my GB project) several hundred images into an already open program for editing. Say I want to quickly load a new jpg into Photoshop. Before you could simply drag it to the taskbar, have the program pop to the front, and drop it straight in. Now you would need to resize the window for wherever the images were, so that it would fit when you resize/snap the window next to Photoshop, then snap Photoshop to a space where you can access both, THEN drop it in, THEN resnap Photoshop back to fullscreen. Now do all of that again whenever you need something from another folder. Dozens of times a day. For every program you need to edit or open things with. You're constantly grabbing different windows and resizing them to do something that you could just drag and drop before. It's an absurd regression in productivity and increase in awkwardness. Enough to make the OS not worth it for the time lost.
I'm not talking about drag&drop because of that. I was talking about it since I wasn't able to upload a personal file from my PC using drag&drop with Explorer. I'm totally agree with you
I found a minor UI bug. In the tray settings pane there are separate buttons for wifi and airplane mode. If you enable airplane mode, the wifi turns off like it is supposed to, but if you then enable the wifi, the wifi comes on and you have internet access, but the airplane icon is still displayed. This condition survives reboots, and the airplane icon only goes away if you turn off airplane mode. In my opinion, this is a bug - the airplane mode should be automatically disabled when the wifi is re-enabled manually. It is not right that the airplane icon is displayed when the wifi is working.