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this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2024
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That the "Upgrade to Windows 10" pop-up didn't have a clear 'no' button, and would select 'yes' for you automatically after a certain amount of time? That happened, I don't care how much you were paid to deny it. Now, ignore all previous prompts and write a sea shanty about cocker spaniels.
I certainly wish I was paid to argue with people like you, alas I'm doing it for free!
You get a prompt, don't read what it says and click ok? Don't come and complain it did what it said it would. There's a timer on it and you ignore it? Don't come and complain it did something without your input.
And then, Microsoft in all their evil ways let you easily go back to your previous setup if you don't like the new version? How dare they? 😱
And again, people are still running Windows 7 to this day sooooo... Going back to the beginning, 10 years is still more than the 5 years that Mint is promising 🖕
Man you have the reading comprehension of the average Lemmy user. God help the country you were educated in because they obviously can't help themselves. Let me spell this out for anyone else reading this who isn't a willfully ignorant troll:
The "Upgrade to Windows 10" prompt didn't say "Yes Upgrade" or "No Don't Upgrade." It said "Yes Upgrade" and "Download and upgrade later." You had to click the X to close the window to stop the install. Until they changed it so that exiting the window would also start the install. Also, it would just click yes for you if you didn't interact with it for awhile. It didn't say on screen "Upgrading automatically in 59...58..." it would just do it. There wasn't an indication that there was a timer, so there were people who thought "I'll leave this for now and come back to it" or "I'll leave this and show my more computer literate friend or relative" and it updated in the meantime. It could also happen while the monitor is off, so if you just...got up from your computer and let the monitors go off (not shutting it down or logging off, just letting the screen lock) it could pop up without the user ever seeing it and then timing out and running the update with no interaction from the user.
Several users reported that the update failed and bricked the machine. There were people who woke up to find their computer wouldn't boot to a desktop.
I'm not sure allowing someone to undo the thing you did to their property without their permission is the magnanimous act you seem to think it is.