I wish i was dilligent enough to do that. Generally, for migration, I use a new hdd for the OS, and mount my previous drive as a documents drive. I also get a separate drive for a full backup. I’ve been doing this for so long that I have uninterrupted personal files since 1997. However, it requires a good cleanup and organisation of all documents since the previous migration, and I’m too lazy to do it until I’m forced to.
You just reminded me of the arguments I had with people when the start menu changed. They really wanted to press start, go to all programs, look for software publisher folder, look for software name folder, look for software name, click. They swear it was more efficient than pinning it to the start menu, or pressing start and type the first couple of letters to find a program and start it.
8’s did have some major issues though, but eventually 10 nailed it imo. I swear that if modern UI designers come up with something good, it’s wholly by accident and they have no idea why it’s good. What they ended up with on 11 is objectively inferior.
Same! I wasn’t thrilled with the start menu of 8, but 8.1 fixed that. Especially after skipping Vista, it was nice to finally move to something else. Since I work in IT, we decided not to use 8 either in the company, but I could do whatever and was happy to use it until 10 released. We even got the first few surfaces just to try out as well, which were cool.
I’m gonna say it.
I thought windows 8/8.1 were very fun
When I first booted a Windows Server with tiles interface, I was tempted to yeet it out of the window [sic!].
Still using 8.1 on my personal PC. Once Bitdefeder stops supporting it, I’ll switch to Mint and get a few more years from the hardware.
It’s better to migrate on your own timeline instead of letting a vendor dictate it
I wish i was dilligent enough to do that. Generally, for migration, I use a new hdd for the OS, and mount my previous drive as a documents drive. I also get a separate drive for a full backup. I’ve been doing this for so long that I have uninterrupted personal files since 1997. However, it requires a good cleanup and organisation of all documents since the previous migration, and I’m too lazy to do it until I’m forced to.
You just reminded me of the arguments I had with people when the start menu changed. They really wanted to press start, go to all programs, look for software publisher folder, look for software name folder, look for software name, click. They swear it was more efficient than pinning it to the start menu, or pressing start and type the first couple of letters to find a program and start it.
8’s did have some major issues though, but eventually 10 nailed it imo. I swear that if modern UI designers come up with something good, it’s wholly by accident and they have no idea why it’s good. What they ended up with on 11 is objectively inferior.
We had users at work who swore by that so hard that my boss bought licenses for “Classic Shell” that just did that.
Usefulness wise, the pinned program and search method is objectively much better.
I think that knowledge of the search method separates the haters from the lovers.
If only the search function worked more than half of the time, just like it doesn’t work on 10
I enjoyed windows 8 when I was able to play Jetpack Joyride on my PC before I had a smartphone.
Then after that wore off I reinstalled Windows 7.
Better than 11 at any rate
Same! I wasn’t thrilled with the start menu of 8, but 8.1 fixed that. Especially after skipping Vista, it was nice to finally move to something else. Since I work in IT, we decided not to use 8 either in the company, but I could do whatever and was happy to use it until 10 released. We even got the first few surfaces just to try out as well, which were cool.