Quick quiestion, will I need to update to Win10 or will it be playable with Win7?
You bring the floppies and we can give it a tryWhat about Win95?
That's why I wasn't sure. U4 can handle both right? DX11 and DX12 afaik...Was that not because xp didn't support dx11, so unless they intend for it to be dx12 only you should be good.
It can, it would be a brave Dev to exclude DX 11 of hand I can't think of any games that do.That's why I wasn't sure. U4 can handle both right? DX11 and DX12 afaik...
Forza 7 and horizon 3It can, it would be a brave Dev to exclude DX 11 of hand I can't think of any games that do.
And we know Microsoft isn't that type of company.forcing people into win 10.
Haha. At least we all know that acc won't be another ForzaAnd we know Microsoft isn't that type of company.
I just don't remember the amount of problems mentioned about win 10 when win 7 came out.I would upgrade if needed... Win10 isn't bad at all in my opinion... it's just a hassle and I'm a lazy ?^^§)/%...
Then I would say your memory isn't very good, or you simply weren't paying enough attention back then (for multitude of reasons). There are always tons of issues when a new Windows version comes out, and it would be hard to pick one version that stands out (except maybe Windows Me ). I mean, I would even say the amount of issues people were facing when Windows XP came out would easily overshadow anything Win 10 related. Same goes for Win 7 - people will now tell you how great and reliable and trouble free Win 7 is compared to Win 8 or Win 10, but that certainly wasn't the case when it first came out. It's just that people had almost a decade to get used to it and both Microsoft and software and hardware developers had almost a decade to polish out the majority of issues. So yes, the current Win 7 experience is drastically different from the experience you got when Win 7 came out. People were pulling their hair out when upgrading from XP or Vista to Win 7, and at least the same amount of people that now vehemently swear by Win 7 did so back then in regard to XP.I just don't remember the amount of problems mentioned about win 10 when win 7 came out.
Same goes for Win 7 - people will now tell you how great and reliable and trouble free Win 7 is compared to Win 8 or Win 10, but that certainly wasn't the case when it first came out.
Yeah, that as well. I wanted to mention this, but apparently that part will be included in the possible sequel to my first novel, if sales of the first one are OKit often seems to be the default position to blame the OS. Many of the complaints that start with "Windows 10 update wrecked my system" end up being caused by something completely unrelated to the OS.
Then I would say your memory isn't very good, or you simply weren't paying enough attention back then (for multitude of reasons). There are always tons of issues when a new Windows version comes out, and it would be hard to pick one version that stands out (except maybe Windows Me ). I mean, I would even say the amount of issues people were facing when Windows XP came out would easily overshadow anything Win 10 related. Same goes for Win 7 - people will now tell you how great and reliable and trouble free Win 7 is compared to Win 8 or Win 10, but that certainly wasn't the case when it first came out. It's just that people had almost a decade to get used to it and both Microsoft and software and hardware developers had almost a decade to polish out the majority of issues. So yes, the current Win 7 experience is drastically different from the experience you got when Win 7 came out. People were pulling their hair out when upgrading from XP or Vista to Win 7, and at least the same amount of people that now vehemently swear by Win 7 did so back then in regard to XP.
Pretty much the only thing that changes to some extent is the complaints get more and more visible as people's opinions and complaints are easier to share on various blogs, social media, forums and stuff like that, and it's also way easier for unsubstantiated claims and rumors and FUDs to circulate amongst people, which gives them validity, even if they might not be valid at all. I'd bet a majority of people claiming how horrible Windows 10 is do so purely based on something they read somewhere on the internet or heard someone describe, without even bothering to check if it is actually true, or at best on one or two direct experiences they had and didn't really bother to try and resolve (which I understand, not everyone is willing to do so or get someone to do it for him). Sadly, that's the world we live in now - truth is based on what people share and like on the internet the most, not on what is factually correct. That was far less of a factor in the past the further back you go.
Though in a way, the bad reputation and "doing a fresh install" posts are indeed Microsoft's fault, but not because Win 10 is *that* bad - but because with Win 10, they decided to switch to a different release model, so the big updates are not the usual updates people were used to, but they're basically a whole new Windows version and installing them is the equivalent of upgrading say Windows 7 to Windows 8, which is something that was always problematic with Windows (amongst other things also due to the sheer amount of hardware and software combinations out there) and just doing a fresh install was always the go-to solution. The only difference now is that the user starts with what is called Windows 10, and ends up with something that's *still* called Windows 10, even though his entire OS has just underwent what would otherwise be a complete OS upgrade.