Nothing would surprise me with Windows 10 - but home/pro tends to have an annoying tendency to get busy in the background with maintenance and update relevant tasks at random which can impact benchmarks at times which in theory LTSC shouldn't.
Ran it for a few months and I did quite like it to be honest.
It's certainly not as bloated as Pro and has less going on in the background.
Out-of-the-box by default
No Windows Store
No Cortana
No EDGE
No major feature updates, you only get security patches.
Ultimately I had to go back to Pro though as LTSC didn't receive the DX12.1 or AMD scheduling fix updates.
So yes it's good... but also limited when it comes to the latest hardware.
They need to just make a mainstream Windows 10 release without all of the bloat, or why not just ask people what features they want installed during setup.
They need to just make a mainstream Windows 10 release without all of the bloat, or why not just ask people what features they want installed during setup.
It makes me face palm sometimes - I mean they make a big deal about the whole Windows as a service model but part and parcel of that really should be people able to deploy Windows as a service as they need it selecting what components they do and don't need, etc. Windows 10 should be perfectly possible to install anywhere from a bare bones implementation through to a fully curated experience for those who aren't very tech savvy and various other forms in between.
The people working on Windows 10 really lack vision and experience so many things are re-treading ground where the lessons were learnt 20+ years ago, sure sometimes it is useful to test old lessons to see what might have been overlooked, etc. but those lessons were learnt for a reason and the developers don't seem to be learning from re-treading that ground either. I mean it is 2021 for goodness sake and the start menu still has no group management functionality! something MS got right 30 odd years ago but can't seem to manage today.
Sure they are working on an OS which isn't an easy task but the developers come off as being dumb as ****.
They need to just make a mainstream Windows 10 release without all of the bloat, or why not just ask people what features they want installed during setup.
It's simple market abuse really - you have a stranglehold on the PC gaming market yet you can't monetize that market share easily like you can with your console - by taking a cut of each game sold and/or selling the hardware.
So instead you pack your OS with code designed to harvest your users' data and then sell that information off to marketing companies. It's almost worse than what Google and Facebook do as at least you can just kick them to the kerb. You can't get away from Microsoft if you want to game on a PC.
I have wondered where the EU is in all this, given they got twitchy backsides over just a browser last time. I guess the right palms got greased.
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