My believe is that those files are packed using 7-zip and Windows 11 possibly detects it as the best option to use. Did you try to compress the files you selected with the 7-zip to see what happens next?
Every new LCU will make this fake windows more n more worst . you all will feel the difference & will quit using this fake OS plus will suggest everybody else not to use it. Time is coming very near . just wait n watch .
When you click About Registry Editor on Windows 11 it will display Windows version with registry icon. That needs some fix from Windows 11 developers.
It writes/deletes the same registry key/value as already posted. Was good in the previous 22000.51 build but it doesn't work in the current build 22000.65 Windows 11 Tweaks and Modifications [Overview]
Why are most people ain't adapting to new stuff they come with instead of being determined to bring old styles back
I just hope they add all the lost functionality back to explorer, context menus and the taskbar by the time Windows 11 is released for general public. The current context menus are huge. This is my tweak to remove the useless "Open In Windows Terminal" context menu. It makes desktop context menu very small and compact. Code: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Shell Extensions\Blocked] "{9F156763-7844-4DC4-B2B1-901F640F5155}"="" Save that as reg file and run. Reboot PC or restart explorer.exe
Agree, and personally I really can't see what the fuss is about - it's less cluttered and all the other items you might want are just one click away. Big deal. Anyway, if you really, really, really want the old style context menu, it's perfectly possible using Auto Hot Key to assign Shift F10 to a right mouse click. Done.
Nice, as others may find it useful too, you should post this in @Enthousiast Windows 11 Tweaks Fixes and Modifications [Overview] thread. Update: I see you have.
When the battery is 100%, it does not load or when we charge the battery, the desktop constantly turns off and on and gives an error. Anyone else having this problem?
not mocking win 11 out just think it is a mess right now till it gets out of development it'll get better and be a step forward from, win 10
The big problem with Windows 11 is not the user-interface, because that can be tweaked and fixed. MSFT hardware restrictions (UEFI, secure boot, TPM, etc.) are a bigger problem. Windows has gone through stages where they force users to buy new hardware. It’s not an issue of having obsolete hardware. It’s about creating an OS software environment where you can’t run your old hardware because you can’t get drivers or because the new OS is so bloated, inefficient and insecure that you can’t run your old hardware with it. I remember when I could accomplish just as much work in 2006 with Windows XP as I do today with Windows 10! Windows 11 is just another version of Windows to make you dissatisfied with what you’ve got and spend another $1000 on a PC that has bells and whistles you may not even need.
100% agreed. Old PCs mostly can run 11, but M$ wants to give people a feeling that their PC isn't good or modern enough. That's how business works...
This is just planned obsolescence; the same situation exists with mobile phone and Android doesn't support your (not so) old phone.
The biggest problem is the Microsoft account. Windows Home will not work without it. This might not be a big deal in developed countries, but my colleagues and I frequently travel to locations where there is no internet. One of the sites we've worked at was so remote we had to drive for 4 hours just to get to a place where there was a signal for our cellphones. We still don't have in-flight internet in most of our airlines. I don't want my laptop to be unusable if there's no internet. I have Pro, always have, but some of my colleagues have Home. They will all have to be migrated to Pro. I expect a lot of people will move away from Home because of this. Regarding the hardware restrictions, I expect that with our tweaking we will get to a stage where only the software features that explicitly require that hardware will be unavailable. That would make sense. No fingerprint reader - fingerprint login won't work. No supported webcam - facial recognition login won't work. No gamepad - games which need it won't work. No UEFI and secure boot - that layer of additional security won't be available. A user does not HAVE to have all the hardware necessary to support all the features and capabilities that are built into Windows. I don't have a touchscreen - I'm just dandy without it. I don't have a point of sale terminal - I'm just fine without that functionality too. If I need that functionality, I'll get the hardware that is necessary to run it. 5G SIM adapter, optical audio port, displayport, ... I could go on, but I'm sure you've got my point.