Windows 11 is so broken that even Microsoft can’t fix it(techradar.com)
techradar.com
Windows 11 is so broken that even Microsoft can’t fix it
https://www.techradar.com/news/windows-11-is-so-broken-that-even-microsoft-cant-fix-it
37 comments
It's not clickbait unfortunately and the article shouldn't be flagged. Anyone who works closely with Windows in recent years knows that the OS is falling apart inside at a catastrophic rate. They seem to have entered some sort of tech debt spiral. Basic things that were once reliable no longer work right and MS seem unable or unwilling to fix them, or their attempts to fix them break things even further. I've seen them flatly give up on fixing bugs in things as basic as the sockets library or CreateProcess. Plus there are multiple critical, stop-ship level bugs in parts of Windows 10 that you'll hit if you follow their documentation for how to write and ship Windows apps. Some of these are fixed in Win 11 but they aren't backporting the fixes.
Take a look at this page:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-clien...
What other OS has such a huge page dedicated to debugging failures in something as basic as the menu of apps? It's impossible to imagine Apple having anything even close to this. The first one in the list is: "Deployment/Install issues - Easiest to identify but difficult to recover. This failure is consistent and usually permanent. Reset, restore from backup, or rollback to recover". As in, the start menu can now get so messed up that the only way to fix it is to reinstall the entire OS, and this isn't one bug but a whole class of bugs. Others mention corrupted local databases, corrupted registry keys, etc. Again, this isn't news to devs who have to work around this crap all day. Microsoft doesn't seem able to introduce a cache or a database into the OS without screwing it up and introducing random data corruptions and failures all over the place.
Take a look at this page:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/troubleshoot/windows-clien...
What other OS has such a huge page dedicated to debugging failures in something as basic as the menu of apps? It's impossible to imagine Apple having anything even close to this. The first one in the list is: "Deployment/Install issues - Easiest to identify but difficult to recover. This failure is consistent and usually permanent. Reset, restore from backup, or rollback to recover". As in, the start menu can now get so messed up that the only way to fix it is to reinstall the entire OS, and this isn't one bug but a whole class of bugs. Others mention corrupted local databases, corrupted registry keys, etc. Again, this isn't news to devs who have to work around this crap all day. Microsoft doesn't seem able to introduce a cache or a database into the OS without screwing it up and introducing random data corruptions and failures all over the place.
Yeah, the article even states it itself after much handwringing, though in another bullshit manner:
> Microsoft claims that it is working on a resolution, and I hope it's able to roll one out that fixes the issue without making users uninstall certain apps. It's concerning, though, that there seem to be areas where Windows 11 (and Windows 10, which is also suffering from this problem) is so broken that Microsoft simply can’t fix it.
Yes, software cannot be fixed by magically snipping your fingers. It takes time and effort. What a surprise. Duh.
> Microsoft claims that it is working on a resolution, and I hope it's able to roll one out that fixes the issue without making users uninstall certain apps. It's concerning, though, that there seem to be areas where Windows 11 (and Windows 10, which is also suffering from this problem) is so broken that Microsoft simply can’t fix it.
Yes, software cannot be fixed by magically snipping your fingers. It takes time and effort. What a surprise. Duh.
It's not clickbait, it's unfortunately sad truth every microsoft slave/user has to cope with.
It still holds true to just avoid every other release of Windows if one really must use it. Luckily the only thing I need Windows for is as a runtime environment for Visio and Project in a virtual machine, so doesn't matter how bad the OS UI tends to be (assuming they don't screw those up as they did for Office ribbons introductions).
Luckily with using Linux, if I don't like a UI, I just modify it, or change to an entirely different one that suits me. Microsoft slaves don't get this option.
It still holds true to just avoid every other release of Windows if one really must use it. Luckily the only thing I need Windows for is as a runtime environment for Visio and Project in a virtual machine, so doesn't matter how bad the OS UI tends to be (assuming they don't screw those up as they did for Office ribbons introductions).
Luckily with using Linux, if I don't like a UI, I just modify it, or change to an entirely different one that suits me. Microsoft slaves don't get this option.
Complex bugs are hard to fix.
Complex bugs that only affect a small subset of users are hard to fix and not worth prioritizing.
This is not a Microsoft or a Windows 11 problem, it's a software engineering problem. Actually it's even just a basic business problem.
How is this news?
Complex bugs that only affect a small subset of users are hard to fix and not worth prioritizing.
This is not a Microsoft or a Windows 11 problem, it's a software engineering problem. Actually it's even just a basic business problem.
How is this news?
Careful with that. Everything is relative. When your user base is 2 billion users, a small subset of users is still a large number. 0.01% of 2B is 200,000.
With great power comes great responsibility. Or at least, it should.
With great power comes great responsibility. Or at least, it should.
It's chilling to think about. Back when Windows updates were particularly obnoxious, I went to work and had a forced update from 9 to 10:30 despite setting up acceptable update times and shutting down the laptop regularly.
An hour and a half of lost productivity because of poor UX! If everyone else who uses Windows for work experiences a similar time loss, it's costing humanity billions. Plus all the stories of updates prior to important meetings and presentations.
Microsoft intentionally monopolised work computing and now the whims they use to extract more revenue from paying customers have absurd negative externalities.
An hour and a half of lost productivity because of poor UX! If everyone else who uses Windows for work experiences a similar time loss, it's costing humanity billions. Plus all the stories of updates prior to important meetings and presentations.
Microsoft intentionally monopolised work computing and now the whims they use to extract more revenue from paying customers have absurd negative externalities.
My company thankfully supports Windows and Mac. The PowerPoint & meeting types generally use Windows. All us devs use Macs. It’s bad enough we have to suffer the horrible UX of Teams. I could not imagine having to deal with Windows on a daily basis, although Linux Subsystem for Windows is pretty cool—-like a sip of cool water on a desert island!
How is that different from a world where 1000 software companies have merely 2m customers, and each one doesn't fix problems that affect only 2000 users?
There's a lot to talk about with scale, but I'm not sure I believe smaller companies fix 100% of bugs, or that we should have different expectations for larger companies.
There's a lot to talk about with scale, but I'm not sure I believe smaller companies fix 100% of bugs, or that we should have different expectations for larger companies.
I'm not saying it shouldn't be fixed, I'm saying it shouldn't be fixed before other more impactful / easy to fix bugs.
It's just a matter of prioritization, it doesn't mean it will be swept under the rug and left there to rot, unlike what the article claims.
It's just a matter of prioritization, it doesn't mean it will be swept under the rug and left there to rot, unlike what the article claims.
UWP and the Windows Store never worked 100% but it never affected me much because most of those apps were ‘crapplets’, for a long time the only one I needed was a driver for HP scanners, today I have a Canon MFP and all the programs for it are ordinary Windows programs that “just work”.
Save yourself a click, it’s just a bug they’re still working on.
I cherish the days when Windows 10 was meant to be the last version of Windows. Still hope they brush Windows 12 under the carpet and turn 180 degrees, nothing good can come out of that one. Although maybe Windows 11 becomes the new 8, unceremoniously forgotten.
I don't. Since they are busy breaking windows 11, windows 10 is a lot more stable.
You do? If windows 10 was an orchestra then every instrument group would be taking instructions from different conductors. Clowns with trumpets would be roaming the audience playing loudly right next to unsuspecting members. When asked to stop they would sulkily reply that the full auditory experience is now being missed. Oh, and the scene changers would pull the curtains in the middle of the performance. It might still be ok for some of the audience, but the more discerning would find it somewhat disturbing.
Learning that MacOS has thousands of open bugs, I'm wondering how many are open in Windows.
Which country, or group of countries, will try to make Linux for the masses, or at least for their government and public servants, a reality -- and when?
Is it going to be India? The EU? Brazil? Nigeria?
Is it going to be India? The EU? Brazil? Nigeria?
I remember that the Kerala government (southern state in India) deployed an ubuntu-based operating system on 200,000 laptops in government-funded schools in 2021. Turns out they saved an estimated $360,000 compared to Windows/ChromeOS offerings.
https://www.onmanorama.com/career-and-campus/top-news/2021/0...
https://www.onmanorama.com/career-and-campus/top-news/2021/0...
So using Linux over Windows saves only $1.8 per user? If anything that makes an amazing selling point for Windows.
$1.80 doesn't sound like a lot in the US, but I'm sure the government would want to spend the savings on teacher salaries and equipment rather than on trivial Windows licenses - especially in developing countries where every dollar counts.
These types of broad summaries at least often fail to talk about the cost of support, education, and interoperability.
Eg xrdp is a huge productivity hit at best, but honestly not viable at all.
Eg xrdp is a huge productivity hit at best, but honestly not viable at all.
Linux is already widely used in govt and public servant computers. It's easy to do that, but to do it "for the masses" is an entirely different game.
To this day, laptop and desktop computers "for the masses" exist almost solely for office work and gaming. Windows and Microsoft products are too ingrained in both use cases, so it will take a herculean effort in changing software standards and platforms for app vendors to consider Linux.
To this day, laptop and desktop computers "for the masses" exist almost solely for office work and gaming. Windows and Microsoft products are too ingrained in both use cases, so it will take a herculean effort in changing software standards and platforms for app vendors to consider Linux.
The effort required is mainly in preventing Microsoft from subtly pressuring OEMs to either not offer Linux or to cripple their offerings.
The year of the Linux desktop ought to have started with the netbook craze of 2007 but Microsoft's nuclear response to that (free windows licenses, ordering OEMs to cap netbook RAM at 2GB) successfully choked that market segment in its sleep.
There are, unfortunately, an awful lot of ways Microsoft can still subtly bring legally deniable pressure to bear on OEMs and antitrust enforcement in America is a joke anyhow.
The year of the Linux desktop ought to have started with the netbook craze of 2007 but Microsoft's nuclear response to that (free windows licenses, ordering OEMs to cap netbook RAM at 2GB) successfully choked that market segment in its sleep.
There are, unfortunately, an awful lot of ways Microsoft can still subtly bring legally deniable pressure to bear on OEMs and antitrust enforcement in America is a joke anyhow.
Chromebooks managed it, made by OEMs. The issue with Linux is pervasively user-hostile design in the name of GNU ideology, not Microsoft
The only thing that will make it, is the increase of nationalism, which will make FOSS OSes the only option that is somehow free from USA influence.
Other than that, I keep reading about the big Linux exodus for the last 20 years, myself I have given up for the Apple, Google and Microsoft controlled ecosystems, after having emails with a signature that used to have M$ on it, and having been a Linux Journal subscriber for the lifetime of its printed existence.
Other than that, I keep reading about the big Linux exodus for the last 20 years, myself I have given up for the Apple, Google and Microsoft controlled ecosystems, after having emails with a signature that used to have M$ on it, and having been a Linux Journal subscriber for the lifetime of its printed existence.
Just issue Chromebooks for the 90 percent if most of the work happens in webapps?
Even worse spyware.
Enjoy implementing the legal and compliance requirements yourself on linux, then. We live in a society, after all.
Enterprise chromebooks are not a consumer product, they are beholden to an entirely different terms of service.
You can either have the desktop linux that is proven to work as a drop-in replacement, or you can have the lab rat version that only works out in engineering orgs.
You can either have the desktop linux that is proven to work as a drop-in replacement, or you can have the lab rat version that only works out in engineering orgs.
But with very polished drivers and firmware underneath.
Untying it from google is quite hard, though.
Untying it from google is quite hard, though.
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> Next steps: We are working on a resolution and will provide an update in an upcoming release.
So, they just haven't fixed it yet.