windows has gotten worse ever since
windows 2000 sp4.
Win 98 is where I tap out, I quite like that one and that was the best for desktop UI.
the question is not whether you or i can make it run in a VM
the question is whether an end user (NO OFFENSE GRAYM) is properly served introducing a new OS he is not familiar with.
This wouldn't be any different compared to switching to Mac. There is always going to be teething pains, however, at least there are DEs that do make things easier and more
Windows like out of the box (this is a double edged sword, marketing on the Linux side has been piss poor in this regard). Can't say the same for Mac. The biggest advantage that Mac does have, is that software on
Windows has a better chance of having a Mac port compared to a Linux one.
if we are thinking it is outside connections causing his problem, i would suggest a clean loading of
windows WITH A LOCAL USER, not a microsoft account, and then connecting the printer with an ethernet crossover cable.
this way we give the internet a viable alibi when something goes wrong
There is no way that local account access is going to last forever, and probably even shorter for those on the Pro version. Enterprise may last longer, but even Enterprise couldn't escape some things that people originally went to Pro to avoid, but Pro got sucked in and eventually Enterprise as well. Shoot, they are already have
Windows 365 as it is. Pretty soon it's going to be thin clients with enough of a system to boot into an Azure instance for
Windows users. And as WASM gets better, more and more software will probably run off a web runtime.
I personally would speculate that even something like
Windows updates could be causing issues. I think I read somewhere that up to 40% of MS code is now "AI" generated. I had posted several articles were "AI" tooling is being hoisted onto the devs as part of their evauls.
Companies that used to be software OEMs are now more into data collection companies. They have a captive audience and they are using that to the best of their ability.
if you suggested he switch to a linux version of signlab (is there such a thing, i am not a signlab guy) i would agree with you.
There is rarely going to be such a thing, especially if it's using the Win32 API (or similar). If it's using Qt, (Maya uses this toolkit, same with TeamViewer etc, I doubt GTK will be used for a
Windows builds, it's a pain to setup for
Windows, it's honestly a pain for Linux as well) or Electron (eventually it may be this or just a castrated webview that dials a website (like Canva does for it's "native" builds)) that may get one, but I doubt it. Only commercial software of any type available on Linux would be Caldera and they only support a subset of Linux distros.