47 comments

  • vunderba 2 hours ago

    Anyone who still needs to run Windows 10 for whatever reason should switch over to Windows 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC 2021 (version 21H2) which will continue to receive security updates up through 2032.

    https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/release-health/rel...

    • giancarlostoro 21 minutes ago

      Linux is free and less wasteful on resources on the other hand.

      • vunderba 17 minutes ago

        It is, and if you can switch, it’s highly recommended. I have some pretty bespoke old RS-232 Windows software that was an absolute disaster to get working under Debian with Wine a few years back, so I (and others) might still need to keep a copy of Windows around.

        • ihalip 7 minutes ago

          Might want to try again, Wine progressed a lot in the past couple years.

        • f-az 10 minutes ago

          Can’t wait till Fable 6 can just decompile and reimplement old software like that.

    • LeFantome an hour ago

      Current trends indicate that regular Windows 10 may as well.

    • everyone an hour ago

      Also MS go to great lengths to make the secret good version of Windows (It honestly is very good, I'd put it up there with Linux Mint) very difficult to buy. So just torrent it. It's bad enough running Windows let alone giving money to MS.

      • shevy-java an hour ago

        > It honestly is very good, I'd put it up there with Linux Min

        I am not necessarily a Microsoft hater per se, but to insinuate that Linux is on the same level as the Microsoft operating system is really strange to me. Whenever I, for instance, have to copy files to windows, I am getting annoyed at how slow it is compared to Linux. And that's just one issue I have. Another one is how slow e. g. ruby is on windows, compared to linux. The windows operating system is simply not good. Linux also has issues, in particular the main GUIs (both qt and gtk suck).

        • nly 34 minutes ago

          And good god...windows 11 updates still take fucking hours and still require multiple reboots. How this is still so painful after 2 decades is beyond me

    • osti an hour ago

      Does that support modern gaming?

      • giancarlostoro 19 minutes ago

        There used to be a website something like "windowsserver2008gaming.com" or something like that idr the specific domain, that was literally a guide to turn old windows server OS installs into gaming computers. The golden years.

      • badocr an hour ago

        It does support "modern gaming" yes, but like the sibling comment mentions, at least Riot's anti-cheat demands Windows 10 22H2 (the last iteration of Win10) as a minimum. There are a few somewhat convoluted workarounds floating around that people use. Also Adobe CS seems to require Win10 22H2.

      • vunderba an hour ago

        My only caveat is that I’m not sure how it handles multiplayer games that require anti-cheat or DRM-style mechanisms, but it’s been flawless with every title I’ve thrown at it so far (BG3, Shadow of the Tomb Raider, Cyberpunk, Ori, etc)

      • eska an hour ago

        Even Riot’s rootkit ā€œVanguardā€ has reduced requirements for Windows 10.

      • kgwxd 42 minutes ago

        "modern gaming" being a euphemism for "more proprietary software that has chained us to even worse proprietary software for decades".

  • mawadev an hour ago

    What even is Microsoft's strategy? Windows 11 requiring TPM, Secure Boot and being all react wasn't great. Now we have a hardware shortage and ai in everything. I miss the time when it was "My computer" and not "This PC". I just hope they keep Windows 10 around till 2030 and longer...

    • senfiaj an hour ago

      >> Windows 11 requiring TPM, Secure Boot and being all react wasn't great.

      For me a bigger concern is that Windows 11 requires MS account, and making harder and harder to bypass it. This is a disrespect for my freedom and privacy. The hardware is not the biggest issue because it might catch up eventually. https://waspdev.com/articles/2026-03-12/i-ll-probably-never-...

      • lazide 41 minutes ago

        Also the constant turning on despite my prior explicitly disabling of spyware (memory ā€˜live sampling’ to the cloud for ā€˜virus protection’, one drive ā€˜auto backup’), and features I’ve explicitly disabled like copilot.

        It’s creepy as fuck, and for no real benefit to me that I can tell.

        • Terr_ 26 minutes ago

          Plus their privacy-destroying "telemetry" (and scanning your personal files) keeps becoming a bigger and bigger threat to the people.

          Print an anonymous "I am unhappy with the regime" flyer, and MS/Apple already can already help regime thugs to be waiting outside your door.

    • nosioptar 32 minutes ago

      I assume they're secretly trying to get people over to Mageia.

      The people I've switched from windows to Mageia since win11 all love it.

      (As great as Mageia is, it does have small repos compared to Debian or fedora.)

  • firefoxd an hour ago

    I was a ubuntu user and work forced me to use a windows machine. Over the years I've accumulated so much software that I have no intention of leaving behind (photoshop cs2). In the past year though, I've been transitioning back to Ubuntu. So many software now offer Linux support, there's even less incentives to stay with Microsoft products. And of course is doing everything in it's power to alienate us.

    • shevy-java an hour ago

      Have you tried wineHQ? It works very well IMO. But I also understand your point of view here; I have a second computer system on my left running Win10.

  • jbird99 2 hours ago

    Especially with hardware prices at the moment, this is a welcome announcement for many companies right now who need a refresh.

    • jmclnx an hour ago

      And sad for us. We may have to wait for nice cheap used hardware for use with Linux or *BSD.

      But I wonder if components would have been stripped out due to AI. I heard even older RAM and SDD/HDD are getting expensive.

  • freediddy 21 minutes ago

    Why does Windows 11 still have "Control Panel" and "Settings", both of which are similar but entirely different?

    I hate Microsoft, I was very happy with Windows 10 but Windows 11 is different for no reason except to be different.

  • tjoff an hour ago

    Needs to be logged in, so not exactly user friendly. But made me happy, I was afraid I might have to do updates again now I can continue life not being bothered by windows update.

    • toast0 25 minutes ago

      I think you can log in to activate without changing to a microsoft account for desktop login (or at least you can switch back, I have some machines on microsoft account and some not)

    • layer8 an hour ago

      You can use https://github.com/abbodi1406/ConsumerESU to bypass the account requirement.

  • grouchomarx 31 minutes ago

    this will probably go on for a long time, which is great because I won't install win11

  • techteach00 an hour ago

    Windows 10 for me until new games won't run on it

  • b3ing 37 minutes ago

    I wonder if it’s because hardware costs are going up

  • computer23 an hour ago

    They could actually help with the RAM and SSD shortage by extending support for Windows 10.

  • greenavocado an hour ago

    You can get a completely minimalist Windows 11 by grabbing an ISO from Microsoft then reprocessing the ISO by feeding it into this utility: https://github.com/christitustech/winutil (Win11 Creator Tab) to get a NEW ISO which you then install. The end result is an extremely clean and stable Windows 11 installation.

      The resulting image can remove telemetry, bypass hardware requirement checks, and enable local account setup out of the box.
    
    Official docs:

    https://winutil.christitus.com/

    https://winutil.christitus.com/userguide/win11creator/

    • delta_p_delta_x an hour ago

      To anyone reading this: please don't use ISOs downloaded from not-official sources.

      Use an autounattend.xml, the mass graves, and a WinGet JSON to customise an online image.

      [1]: https://schneegans.de/windows/unattend-generator/

      [2]: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/package-manager/wi...

      • EvanAnderson 14 minutes ago

        Do be aware that an autounattend.xml can cause Windows setup to execute arbitrary code. Their provenance matters too. It's relatively easy to encode scripts (or even binaries) into the XML to run during or after Windows setup. You can eyeball them, for sure, but I bet most people don't.

      • layer8 an hour ago

        The tool linked by the parent doesn't download ISOs from non-official sources.

      • LocalH 9 minutes ago

        I use uup dump myself, which downloads the components directly from MS and builds the ISO locally

      • greenavocado 20 minutes ago

        Did you even read what I wrote?

    • eviks an hour ago

      That won't help you get to the minimum of Win10, though

      • greenavocado 20 minutes ago

        Yes it will, please re-read carefully. winutil removes hardware checks.

    • dietr1ch an hour ago

      Even cleaner when you don't install Windows at all :P

      Why would people put themselves through the painful process of keeping themselves safe from their own computer?

      • StableAlkyne 25 minutes ago

        Not everyone has the luxury of moving off of Windows. Solidworks, for example, has no Linux or Mac port.

        Though I do agree, if your workflow is supported by any non-NT based OS, that's probably a better option

        • wildzzz 13 minutes ago

          Anything I need windows for is work related and runs on my locked down (and actually very cleanly stripped down) windows 11 laptop. Its amazing how much Microsoft hates the consumer but bends over backwards for volume license purchasers.

  • shevy-java an hour ago

    I have Win10 on a computer on my left side as "backup" system.

    I decided I won't change to Win11, so Win10 will be last Windows version to use. It's no issue in that I am using Linux since late ~2004 anyway, but I am also unwilling to cater to Microsoft anylonger. I think it is time that governments no longer force people to use Windows in general. For similar reasons I reject the upcoming mandatory age sniffing that lobbyists are pushing for (together with their attempt to kill off VPNs).