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Quote from: KT 💣 KλBoƠM on July 01, 2024, 11:16:08 pmMicrosoft is pretty confident they can make everyone do as they want by now. Win 10 support ending will push more to Win 11.Then I will stay on Win 10 or find another option if need be. I will NOT be going back to Win 11.
Microsoft is pretty confident they can make everyone do as they want by now. Win 10 support ending will push more to Win 11.
I didn't notice this until later. But when I installed a BIOS update on my 9th gen Intel system, (rom version 2004, and then again with 2101) that it quietly enabled the firmware TPM. I installed the BIOS updates, then go back to the BIOS after it's completed and reconfigure some personal settings like XMP and my overclock settings and all. I made sure that rebar is on and firmware TPM is off. Then let the computer reboot. The computer then power cycles 3 to 4 times as it goes through memory training. This is a normal process when enabling XMP profiles. It basically unlocks the full advertised speed of your ram. But during that memory training process (both times) firmware TPM and secure boot got re-enabled. Even the main board venders are trying to get everyone ready to install windows 11 if the system can support it.It was natural to assume that the 13th gen Intel system would have firmware TPM enabled by default. Windows 11 "supposedly" has a better CPU core scheduler than windows 10. And with a CPU that has 16 cores / 24 threads, 8 of which being efficiency cores, that core management is required. I guess that would be nice if the user is concerned about power management? But the fact that windows 10 can manage them just fine, leads me to believe this whole core schedule thing is just another hype train point to make users want to upgrade to windows 11.
I think how they all see it is it is inevitable so let's do it. No thought of hyping it. To them it is already a go!
Quote from: KT 💣 KλBoƠM on July 12, 2024, 09:17:57 pmI think how they all see it is it is inevitable so let's do it. No thought of hyping it. To them it is already a go!It certainly seems that way. It's become more evident lately with the push for AI. GPU's with Cuda cores (or any RT hardware support) will already have some AI support. But the next generation of CPU's will have AI accelerators baked in. And MS has already jumped on that bandwagon when they released Co-Pilot for Windows 11.
Thats odd. None of my windows 10 systems show that feature. It must be an Nvidia RTX thing? I can't confirm that because I have only one system with an Nvidia GTX card. Everything else has AMD cards.
I guess I worked so hard to remove unwanted features and bloat that I never noticed it?
Here is another thing to make you think twice about installing Windows 11.