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bzb3 | 5 years ago

CCleaner does not remove OEM crapware. It "cleans up the registry" and does other stuff that with time has been incorporated into Windows 10 itself.

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nwah1|5 years ago

I think it offered some capabilities to free up disk space but Storage Sense is now part of Windows.

The idea that Windows is some kind of nightmare to work with just isn't my experience at all. It is stable, and the performance is fine. OEM crapware sucks, admittedly, but it isn't as bad as it used to be.

One could reasonably complain that Windows 10 is invasive to your privacy, or adds to the cost of a new computer. And it still lets idiots get into trouble, but only after clicking that they are sure that they are an idiot a few times in a row.

Apple solves that by only letting people do things that they are approved to do by Apple, for a meager 30% fee on every transaction. So the question users need to ask is whether the 30% idiot tax is worth it.

sevensor|5 years ago

To be honest, I've never taken the time to figure out how MacOS works. It's like an OS written for cultists. From the strange way the pointing device works, to the icons that don't mean anything to me, to the names that don't make sense (it's called Finder but I can't figure out how to give it find(1) arguments; isn't this supposed to be a Unix?), it seems designed to isolate the initiated and alienate the outsider.

On the other hand, what I dislike about using Windows is the familiar list of complaints: invasive and hostile telemetry, heavily mouse-driven user interface, I-know-better-than-you automatic reboots at awkward times, incredibly poor performance on older hardware, advertisements and unwanted widgets baked into the start menu, garbage applications I didn't want that are installed because Microsoft wants them there, inconsistent application installation behavior, deeply incapable budget SKUs for cheaper hardware, path length limits, people running everything with administrator privileges, weird file locking behavior (ever tried to write to a file that's opened the wrong way for reading?), fragile support for terrible hardware that works just long enough to make a buck, ... I could go on all day. Basically, my problem with Windows is that when you use it, you've paid to have an experience that's worse than what you can get for free in every way that matters to me but one. The only thing Windows has going for it is that it runs Excel like a champ.