Every version of windows is intentionally worse than the last since 10, I hate 10 as it is I dunno how anyone can put up with 11.
Ok, gonna take this opportunity to ask what's wrong with it?
(I have been asking this question since 98, all I get is "It sux bro")
I'm being sincere btw. Besides blahblahprivacy whats the big horrible of it?
First thing about W10 to W11 is a shift in Microsofts paradigm.
W10 and before, they were still in a traditional model of a self contained product.
W11 is supposed to be the last "numbered" version, and slowing trying to move from the traditional licensing to a subscription model, when supposelly you gonna need to keep paying yearly for the important update (feature and security ones).
Leaving alone the questionable Microsoft plans for the future and only looking for W11, the first complain is that W11 was developed considering a pretty good hardware. Many not too old computer and notebook would be below Microsoft recommended stats. That could explain some relatively old notebooks perfoming badly with W11.
Regarding the builtin tools that comes with W11, its also questionable how they have been "improving" many of them disruptively. They could make a soft transition but no. They are simply bombing traditional tools and replacing it with a more convoluted version of it. Just to mention a few, for example the traditional Paint now comes with a sets derived from profissional digital drawing like layers, many types of pens. Its nice, but who are they targeting? Professionals wont ever use Paint for their work. Casuals will need to undertake a unexpected learning curve to make random sketches on Paint? Playing with layers is pretty confusing for people that never messed with that.
Printscreen feature is other that they messed. Something were nice, like partial captures, though they leveraged the capture tool in the printscreen feature. Idk if because of that, but the performance of printscreen plummeted heavily, at least on my hardware. Before it was instantly capture, now it takes 3 to 4 seconds to startup the printscreen, and even after that, at least 1 sec to actually execute. It seems nothing, but for someone taking screenshots of videos, is a very huge pain in the ***.
Saving documents for example. As Microsof goal is to fully integrated to cloud, the default saving option is to do it in OneDrive. But trying to use OneDrive itself also requires a learning curve to correctly use it, because you gonna need internet connection, you gonna need to login in the cloud to check your folder, etc.
So, to sum up, Microsoft have its long term goals, that is based in software with subscriptions and fully integration to the cloud. Many recent introductions were made to make more "interesting" to adopt subscription based software, and to leverage cloud capabilities. The cons of that is a lot of learning curves being forcefully shoved in the endusers despite they never asked for cloud or subscription.
Cloud and subscriptions are ok for enterprise context. For home users, they are used to decades of traditional model. Obviously they wont like it because the new model isnt actually "better" to the traditional ones for endusers.
Its surely better to Microsoft that can sell basically the same product to both enterprise and home users