Shibbyland Posted May 21 Posted May 21 I had to upgrade my mobo and therefore a heap of other stuff just so I could get windows 11 (and I still haven't gotten round to grabbing the upgrade). Old mobo (and it wasn't even that old) didn't meet security requirements. I just about spat out my tea when I saw how much prices had gone up on hardware when essentially everything was running just how I wanted it to. That being said I just blasted across the Syria map in the f-14 and got performance I've never had access to before.
BJ55 Posted May 22 Author Posted May 22 (edited) You've moved from a 9700k to a 14700k, performance increase is expected since it's a faster CPU that runs better on W10+1. @Raven (Elysian Angel) : I know that is possible to install W10+1 with an offline account, for now, but it's not a straightforward procedure, this only shows how much MS is "unfair" (greedy). How hard is to release all the bloatware that's infesting W10/10+1 OS as a separated "Enjoy the CPU Extensive Datagrabbing Backdoors and Keyloggers Experience Pack"? Edited May 22 by BJ55 I7-12700F, 64GB DDR4 XMP1 3000MHz, Asus Z670M, MSI RTX 3070 2560x1440 60Hz, TIR 5, TM WH VPC base, TM rudder, Win10 Pro
draconus Posted May 22 Posted May 22 It's nothing new. Many www sites, shops and even free software ask for registering or logging with existing account like gmail or facebook, often mandatory. Every smartphone, VR, tablet or laptop comes with bloatware (ex. google apps on android, meta on quest, growing windows) that have more rights than it needs (or we want). Removing it only makes it come back with any update. You can root devices, mess with firmwares, registry, firewalls and go all nerdy but you have to ask yourself is it worth your time and does that improve your life in any way. Win10 i7-10700KF 32GB RTX4070S Quest 3 T16000M VPC CDT-VMAX TFRP FC3 F-14A/B F-15E CA SC NTTR PG Syria
BJ55 Posted May 22 Author Posted May 22 (edited) 4 hours ago, draconus said: is it worth Yes! 4 hours ago, draconus said: does that improve your life in any way Yes! I can decide to buy from a e-shop with crappy policies, I can decide to use a smart-surveillance-phone, but since Windows is forced because of professional software requirements... 4 hours ago, draconus said: It's nothing new It is, before 2001 it was unthinkable to give this impressive ammount of personal data to US corporations, but that's another argument. Edited May 22 by BJ55 I7-12700F, 64GB DDR4 XMP1 3000MHz, Asus Z670M, MSI RTX 3070 2560x1440 60Hz, TIR 5, TM WH VPC base, TM rudder, Win10 Pro
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