In response to
"upgrading a microsoft OS is generally a losing prospect anyway. Move to it when you get your next puter. -- nm"
by
Reagen
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The switch to the Windows NT codebase in Windows XP was a watershed. By Windows 7, things have gotten much smoother.
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Windows 8 suffered only in the sense that Microsoft made a lot of assumptions about what consumers wanted, but structurally, it was Windows 7 with a new skin. Windows 11 is much the same, in the sense that it takes a lot of what Windows 10x was supposed to be and they made it a "new release". It is just Windows 10 with a new skin. We haven't really suffered dramatic structural changes since the swap from the Windows 95 codebase to the Windows XP codebase, which was, granted, painful.
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