| ▲ | stego-tech 7 hours ago | |||||||||||||
This. Microsoft has said similar things before, and always tripled down on bad behavior afterward. Their priority is business outcomes, not user experiences or support, and that’s why even this non-apology makes it clear the stuff customers, engineers, and support staff hate - invasive telemetry, outright surveillance/spyware, online-only requirements, AI-everywhere, constant arbitrary deprecation of APIs and endpoints for external tools to drive internal product adoption, refusal to support consumer technologies long-term (MCE, WMR) or do things contrary to everyone else (print drivers) - isn’t actually getting addressed. Don’t listen to the smooth talk. Plan an exit strategy now, before you need it later. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | hbn 6 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
> Plan an exit strategy now, before you need it later. The idea that we'll all be forced off of Windows one day sounds like a dream, but so far we continue to be in a state where myself and many other are long past the point of wanting to leave, but we can't for some reason or another. Microsoft knows that, which is why they've been able to do whatever they want and not worry about the consequences. | ||||||||||||||
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