Get over this AI fixation, Microsoft – that's what many are telling you, so listen and rejig your priorities
Windows 11 has hit some very choppy waters of late. There's never been much in the way of plain sailing for Microsoft's newest operating system, right from its inception, mind you, for various reasons. Whether that's complaints of 'it's just not that different from Windows 10' except that maybe 'it has more bugs', or 'this feature that I love is missing', or 'this part of the interface is slower than Windows 10'. Or indeed 'stop shoving ads in my face, Microsoft' (although that happens on Windows 10, too, but not quite as much).
However, Microsoft has, of late, likely lost all its mirth (one top executive in particular certainly seems to have done so), because there has been something of an explosion of unpopularity around Windows 11. This rather intense burst of hate – in some quarters, because yes, this isn't an all-pervading sentiment – is largely wrapped up in one issue: AI.
Microsoft recently revealed some big new features for Windows 11, and many key pieces revolved around AI and so-called AI agents. Indeed, the software giant went as far as saying that Windows 11 is now 'evolving into an agentic OS' and that sparked quite a rebellion. Folks complained in droves that 'people don't want this' and that Microsoft should instead be working on some of the fundamental parts of Windows 11, which are still wonky, four years after its launch.
The timing of this fresh push with AI can't be coincidental, seeing as it came a month after Windows 10 hit its end of support – earlier in November, when the first update wasn't delivered to unsupported PCs. Presumably, the idea was to show off the sparkling agentic future of Windows 11 in the hope that this would help encourage some Windows 10 users to upgrade (those who had started to worry about their security, lacking those updates). If so, the plan backfired quite spectacularly.
Potential upgraders to Windows 10 didn't end up marvelling at the tricks they might be able to eventually avail themselves of if they went ahead and upgraded to Windows 11. Yes, they were likely astonished, true enough – not by the potential of AI, but rather the fiery outpouring of complaints about how Microsoft needs to fix the basics with Windows 11 before worrying about fancy AI trimmings.
This amounted to a lot of pointing out Windows 11's various shortcomings (some of which I touched on at the outset) and awkward questions being raised. Like: why is File Explorer (the basic folders on your desktop) so slow compared to Windows 10?
Seeing the level of anger reached in some posts must have been off-putting to some onlookers still on the fence about a Windows 11 upgrade. Small wonder, then, that folks are sticking with Windows 10, as Dell underlines – or looking to Linux, and migrating away from Microsoft's ecosystem entirely, as Zorin OS contends.
- coopers, Mutton and Karlston
-
3
Recommended Comments
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.