Agreed. If I'm not mistaken, Linux can be worse than Windows in this way. The trackpad on my Thinkpad R400 (2010?) stopped working under Linux while Win10 still ran fine. I didn't look into it too hard so it may not have been an update issue, but I remain suspicious.iansjack wrote:The answer is simple - you don't run Windows 11 on these machines. It's no different to the Apple world, where you can't run newer OSs on older machines. (And the same is true of Linux, BSD, you name it, although the time scale may be a little different.)
Installing multiple versions of DLLs is normal for WIndows. Under some circumstances, especially large out-of-distro apps, it's normal for Linux too. Overwriting the system DLLs, not so much. There's other places to install them.nullplan wrote:I have fond memories of trying to run foobar2000 on W2K, and it didn't work. Stated reason was that advapi32.dll was missing some function. So what is a poor student with enough knowledge to be dangerous to do? Exactly, download another version of advapi32.dll from the Internet. I believe I got a version from Windows XP. Warnings about system files being tampered with were ignored, and then the whole thing ended in a blue screen. Ultimately it lead to me installing Linux on that box, so it did work out in the end.
As it happens a lot, it looks like a deliberate, insidious marketing ploy.Ethin wrote:Microsoft never officially stated that there would be no windows 11. An employee might've gotten overeager and implied that, but it was never officially stated by MS or their PR team. This is one of those "somebody implied it so we ran with it" scenarios, which seems to happen way too often with MS.