Gold Backed IRA Pros and Cons

Starting October 5, your computer will offer you a choice: upgrade to Windows 11 or stay with Windows 10. You will probably want to stay.
Typically,
feature updates are a no-brainer. Upgrading your PC from one version of
Windows 10 to another usually brings you security updates, bug fixes, and new
features, which justify the hassle. You don't really have the self-determination
to opt out of receiving a Windows 10 update either - you can only delay it for
a short period of time. But Windows 11 offers you a real
option. Microsoft says it will support Windows 10 through 2025, giving you
the option to stick with it for a few more years before its useful life ends.
We have reviewed
Windows 11, and we think you should decline the update and stay on Windows 10
for now, for various reasons.
Knowing how an
operating system, a supermarket or a car engine works is important, especially
if you can instinctively navigate over and done with it. Windows 11 offers
the identical taskbar and start bill of fare and file explorer as Windows 10,
but with unfamiliar layouts, icons, and navigation. You simply won't be as
efficient as Windows 10 until you learn the ins and outs of Windows 11.
This is also
important in applications as mundane as File Explorer. Microsoft's
navigation system for acting out such basic tasks as rechristening files takes
been replaced by obtuse icons that are simply not as memorable as Microsoft
probably expects them to be. Microsoft has every right to redo and update
Windows, but if you have to devote conscious thought to how to do something,
you are justified in wondering if the changes were made for the sake of
changing things.
Windows 11 is
usable in its current form, no doubt. But there are little problems
scattered throughout the operating system that will certainly irritate new
users.
For example, the
taskbar and the start menu, which are less functional than in Windows 10. The
Windows 11 taskbar is dynamically centered, pushing the Start menu icon further
and further to the left as you more applications open. The taskbar cannot
be resized or moved, and users cannot see the icons in tabbed mode with text
explanations in place. When new applications are installed, they can be
pinned to the taskbar, but not directly to the Start menu; Those
applications appear in the "All Applications" menu within Start,
where they can be pinned to the main Start menu. Did we mention the
strange taskbar identification system? Or the notification calendar that
does nothing but be there?
Familiarity and
features go hand in hand. If Windows 11 offered additional abilities,
learning its quirks would be justified. But we think that most people will
merely find that the more familiar Windows 10 environment is also more
productive.
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