What is going on with Windows11?
Since I have no qualms about kicking a proprietary software product while it's down, let's now switch to NTDEVs thoughts on the state of Windows 11.
Unfortunately, the issue that plagued Windows since the dawn of time has only aggravated recently. Windows 11 is a mixture of old and new technologies that are glued together, with decades of legacy code that simply refuses to die (because if it did a lot of corporate costumers would complain, and whether we like it or not they are paying big cash for support to Microsoft).
Also, it tries to have a modern" UI that unfortunately not only is inconsistent, but also it's too heavy for its own good, being just a lipstick on a bloated old pig.
Last, but certainly not least, it is full of AI features that most people didn't ask for, some are even actively feared (see Recall) and are also quite lacking in polish and usefulness.
[...]Until Microsoft stops treating Windows as an AI innovation platform" of sorts and starts treating it as the stable, reliable tool it was always meant to be, the user experience will continue to feel like a battle between the person sitting at the desk and the company that built the desk.
NETDEV
When even some of the most knowledgeable and respected Windows/Windows NT developers and experts are this down on the current state of Windows, you know things are way worse than we even know from just following the news and our own experiences.
Back in 2024, I stated that I firmly believe we will see Windows - or at least, huge, crucial chunks of it - shift to an open source development model, as it's the only way for Windows to move forward without crumbling into itself. It would also be a massive cost-cutting and personnel-culling step for Microsoft, something that seems to become ever more relevant now that the company bet massively on AI", without any of it paying off. They're going to need to do some serious cost-cutting once the AI" bubble bursts, and Windows will definitely be the first on the chopping block.
As a side note, the step to release Windows as open source won't be nearly as difficult or problematic as people think. In fact, Microsoft has provided access to the source code behind Windows and various other products for decades, and countless governments and organisations have access to said source code. On top of that, the source code to Windows XP and Server 2003 is out there, hosted on GitHub, and various other leaks have occurred as well over the years. While I'm sure a large clean-up effort would still be required, and while it surely will be a big engineering effort, if there were any truly shocking things in the code Microsoft wouldn't want the world to see we'd already know by now.
I'm getting the strong feeling Microsoft is trying to squeeze every last drop of revenue out of Windows before it ends up on the chopping block. Windows will definitely not be axed, but cost-cutting is inevitable.