Also, Windows updates requiring restarts isn't that unreasonable. Being able to install updates without the entire system being up and running probably massively simplifies the programming.
"Windows programmers are too lazy to implement what literally every package manager for Linux has managed to implement. You know, you need to
pay for quality and user friendliness."
What kind of argument is that supposed to be?
All requires drivers are on disks that get delivered together with the computer.
I don't have a disk drive, because that is literally be the only thing I'd use it for.
Never cared about clean registry, why should I care about clean registry?
1. Because an ever-growing registry gobbles up space.
2. Because an ever-growing registry slows down your system.
3. Because unclean uninstallers often leave information in your registry. This can go as far as that some program fucks up its registry entries, rendering itself unusable even after a reinstall – have fun finding
anything in the registry! Yes, some of the programs fucking themselves in that way were games.
Since I'm always the administrator of my computer, that's not a problem.
Yes, that is a problem. Well, not the installing part, but the part where you're always administrator.
Figure for instance you want to try out some game you downloaded somewhere on the internet, from some fishy website.
On Windows, you basically have two options:
1. Don't try out that game
2. Be made fun of because you installed some program from an unknown source.
Option 3 of the Linux user is "don't install it but just execute it as non-administrator", which is the
safe option that still allows you to play that game.
Of course that's more a problem of installer/package only programs than a problem of Windows. For some reason package managers still don't support user-space installs.
I turned off all auto-updates a long, long time ago.
On Linux I can keep them on, so getting all that security goodness, without having to bother with forced restarts ever. You basically either leave glaring security holes in your computer or you have to do updates manually every day. I don#t see where this is more user-friendly.
Look guys, I'm not saying Windows is
unusable, I am saying it is less user-friendly than modern Linux distributions. It's got less features that
enable the user to do something, it's got more features that
force the user to do something and in general it's supposedly "modern" interface design is miles behind what even XFCE, one of the most bare-bones desktop environments for Linux, provides.
This new and sleek GUI of Windows10? That's basically as usable as a command line with pretty pictures instead of auto-completion, only that it's got a way more restricted set of commands. The taskbar is perfectly usable, yes, but outdated. After over a decade of the concept becoming normal in the Linux world it still doesn't have multiple desktops. Given that everyone who can, uses them I'd wager they're not just a neat gimmick but actually better than grouped window buttons, because, you know, XFCE has those too.