I disagree… First you can’t compare Windows 10 and 11 with other versions unless you talk about specific releases. There are so many Windows 10 releases… Just like Windows 11 will have… The first releases of Windows 10 were also buggy and missing lots of features… Star Menu was way missing stuff you now take for granted… No dark mode… Horrible blue on icons… inferior Edge… No subsystem for Linux… And the list goes on and on… Let’s remember history, 10 was better received at release because it came with a Start Menu… People we’re going nuts over 8… nothing more…
WWhen clicking on the blue sound icon on the taskbar I have a -1 level regarding the one I put it, i.e., if I put it on 4 and click it, it's on 3. Weird. Also, if not using the latest build it should update during the OOBE if connected to the Internet but in my case it only happens sometimes (so it stays on the same build) or updates but not to the latest build.
Why is win11 bad? I saw some autistic bitching about the design of the menus on Reddit. But my software runs, no driver issues and I haven't had a BSOD. So no it's not as bad as Vista.
For me its the functions that used to be 1 click that are now 2 and I have a workstation with a 43 inch 4K display, one Windows 10 I have my tasks uncombined for a reason. On Windows 11 my tasks are force combined and it makes my workflow super annoying. I'll be on 10 until 11 stops frustrating me or I am forced to upgrade. BTW, most of the reason Vista sucked in the beginning was that hardware was not ready for it and drivers were even less ready. Vista with good hardware and mature drivers is pretty good, basically Windows 7. Windows 7 was a hit because because it was more of less ready to go with hardware support on day 1. Windows 8 sucked because MS said "Hey, you know that workflow you like? Just LOL, start over you plebs."
Biggest difference will probably be 0 builds with the ability to install without internet. Once Windows 11 goes mandatory MS account I am assuming you can sill install the last version where you can bypass and then just update. Windows 12 probably wont exist in a form where you can use that exploit.
The MS account is easy to bypass on Home (+SL) that's not new, now the requirement for being connected is (22543 and up and that too is already bypassed for now).
Finally the release of this build is getting interesting. I have always enjoyed the releases of new versions, the ways M$ plans to make life difficult, and the beautiful ways people smarter than me rise to the challenge. Til now this release has been a bit of a bore, some system requirements to be met that are easily bypassed (heck even M$ tells you how to do it) was the only hickup that went away before it started. BUT finally some interesting things in the mix, watermarks to appear, need to be connected to the web, future updates said to be blocked, having that M$ account. Interesting times ahead.
I want to use ISO to install windows 11 system on a computer without TPM 2.0 module. How can I do this?