▲ | bitwize 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||
What a cool article to have at the 30th anniversary of Windows 95's release (24th of Windows XP's). Windows XP was about the time I started moving away from Windows more definitively, even as a secondary OS. It was the product activation crap. My OS on my computer should serve ME, not be beholden to the vendor after I put it on. Of course, we didn't realize back then how bad things could/would get... So for that reason, I'm not really nostalgic about Windows XP, or subsequent versions, the way some people are. Although it is interesting to see what many now consider to be the bad ideas of Windows 8, get their start in "Neptune"... | |||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | linguae 5 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
I feel the same way about Windows XP. Windows XP may have brought NT-based Windows to regular consumers, which is partly why there's nostalgia for XP, but for those who were already using NT-based Windows at the time, Windows XP wasn't that much better than its predecessor, Windows 2000. To me, Windows 2000 was peak Windows. Windows XP introduced activation, which I find an annoying hindrance, and weird UI decisions in the form of the Fisher-Price Luna interface and the search dog. It was all downhill from there, though Windows 7 was solid and I greatly appreciate the introduction of WSL in Windows 10. | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | herbst 5 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Same here. XP was an absolute security nightmare and the internet felt like the most dangerous place ever. Everybody and my mom were constantly passing viruses around. I haven't looked back switching to Linux back then. |