![]() We can play the usual "I'm a Mac, and I'm a PC" nonsense, and it makes for fun sound bites, but this is not how the real world works.Ĭlearly, in the last year, we have seen Apple make significant changes to the Mac. The PC is not the Mac, and Microsoft's customer base is not Apple's The new M1 iMac highlights everything that's wrong with Apple Then we witnessed that whole imbroglio with Windows Vista, then the migration to Windows 7, and the UX disaster that was Windows 8. For example, in the consumer space, Windows 95/98/ME went to Windows XP, which used the NT kernel and systems architecture we are still using now, and that was a huge deal for consumers.īefore that, while some verticals migrated to Windows NT 3.51 and 4.0, most enterprise businesses went from Windows 95/98 to Windows 2000, implementing Active Directory (and moving from LAN Manager and Novell NetWare to NT in the datacenter) and then XP, so that migration was painful and disruptive to them for many different reasons. They were colossal pain points for consumers and organizations who were upgrading. ![]() ![]() Let's refresh our memory: Before Windows 10 came out, we had large milestone releases that introduced significant changes to the OS. ![]() Microsoft reveals Windows 11 today: What to expect and how to watch.So, why are we getting a new major version of Windows now? How can I make it work more like Windows 10?
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