Windows 11 has moved beyond its early development challenges and is now widely adopted.
Windows 11 has moved beyond its early development challenges and is now widely adopted.
Ordered a fresh WD sn850x SSD to swap out my old 6-year-old SATA SSD. Windows 11 seems to be handling games well now and is likely better than before. I recall some driver problems at first, but nothing significant has happened recently. My system runs AMD 5800X on an ASUS B550 TUF motherboard, paired with a 32GB GPU, 4GB RAM, and a hardware TPM—does that count?
Some people still have issues with it, theres no reason you need to upgrade to 11.
I've been using it from the start or earlier, and I haven't encountered any of these problems.
I handle IT tasks and plan the company's move to 11 next year (hoping no accidents happen). I need to prepare myself for this transition.
I've been using it since around April, especially since the 12th-gen setup works well with the scheduler. The only minor hiccups have been with VMWare Workstation's visual quirks.
I don't rely on version 11. There are still some problems such as unnecessary telemetry data (likely just a matter of convenience), and we need to find ways to set up local accounts. I believe it's not overly unstable or buggy, though there might be a few things that don't work perfectly.
I'm handling desktop updates right now. Mostly battling engineers to swap out the old Windows 7 systems. They want to go live with newer versions, but they insist on using XP because of security concerns. I had to take the cards out manually from their machines.