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Cyran said:

I doubt we see a huge uptick in windows 11 until 2025 when official support for windows 10 ends. It not so much I think consumer care that much for official support but rather many big business going to switch over because of that. It possible they offer payed support for windows 10 longer like they did for windows 7 but I have my doubts and many companies I think will just bite the bullet and switch rather then paying for extended support.

Edit:  Assuming windows 11 is still newest.  Some rumors say they release windows 12 next year which might lead a lot of people to skip windows 11 completely.

Windows 11 basically feels like Windows 8, just not as terrible. There are some nice stuff in there but the UI experience has been all over the place imo.

Zkuq said:

I would like to mention the possibility that AMD relies on some unsupported and unstable functionality for their software, in which case it would absolutely be AMD's fault if a Windows update breaks their software. That would be kind of (but not really) like old Windows software that would have broken, had Microsoft released Windows 9 instead of skipping straight to Window 10, because they were checking whether the version starts with 9.

But it's absolutely not guaranteed that this is the case. I'm just pointing out that it's not necessarily Microsoft's fault if a Windows update breaks things, even though it might be.

Yea certainly could be as well. The legacy stuff can have a lot of implications from a lot of hardware/software vendors.



                  

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