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The big question is whether Win11 is officially supported on your laptop.
If it isn't, I would go with Win10. You have 2-3 years of support remaining, and in that time either MS may expand their Win11 support, or you may decide to replace your laptop.
My personal preference when performing a major version upgrade is to install everything from scratch.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Daniel Pfeffer wrote: The big question is whether Win11 is officially supported on your laptop. Updated my thread on that. Thanks.
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thatraja wrote: 8 year old Laptop Have you checked that the hardware (CPU, TPM level) is sufficient to run Windows 11? Lots of 8 year old machines (including mine, with a CPU that was just released when I bought it) can not run Win 11.
On the other hand: 'End of support' does not make the machine unusable, just that the OS code itself will not be updated to protect against future security attacks. ('Support' could also add functional extensions - but there is not much of that nine years after its release!) Virus/malware protection software is still updated.
We are talking about new threats. How many attackers make new attack software aimed at Win95 these days? Win98? Win XP? Win 7? ... For Win 7, there might be, although I doubt it. I honestly doubt it for 8.1 as well. For Win 10, I would not be surprised by new attacks this year or next year. The more MS succeeds in moving users over to Win 11, the less it pays back for attackers to target Win 10.
I continue running Win 10 without very much worries. I am well behaved on the Internet: I do not download pirated software. I do not visit xxx sites. I do not respond to the 6-10 daily 'special offers' in my inbox (the last week, there has been four every day for McAfee virus protection!) Last time I saw a virus - that was not stopped at the door - on my machines was a floppy boot sector virus (and it was on a 5.25" floppy).
If you go for Win 10, note that mainstream support has already ended. If you want support until 2025, you have to buy the Enterprise version. (Can you still buy it?) New laptops are not that expensive, so maybe the best solution for you would be to buy a new laptop, and continue using the old one for non-internet tasks.
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Recently fixed display issue by replacing Display after visiting service centre. They suggested me to upgrade OS after they too found slowness. They came up with SSD upgrade thing since my old drive can't have new OS upgrades. Additionally I'll be increasing RAM too.
I'm totally aware of "End of support" & "Threats" things & also get it. Agree with you.
I'm also well behaved on the Internet. Last 8+ years, never faced any major or medium issues. Defender, Spybot SD, BleachBit, Host files, etc., 're keeping things better at least normal.
Only for last 1 year I'm facing slowness(during Development only) with my current laptop. Both SSD & RAM upgrades could solve this issue. That's why I'm postponing new laptop(After couple of years, I'll buy new laptop with more high config). BTW I have office laptop too & Both laptop already taking more spaces, so no more space for new laptops.
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trønderen wrote: Have you checked that the hardware (CPU, TPM level) is sufficient to run Windows 11? Lots of 8 year old machines (including mine, with a CPU that was just released when I bought it) can not run Win 11.
Those requirements are such BS. I have a VM host that cannot run Win11. However, I can create a Hyper-V VM on it and have it run Windows 11 with no problem or nasty hack.
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thatraja wrote: I'm going to upgrade my laptop with SSD due to slowness recently A new laptop is likely to have an M.2 main disk, which is yet another significant speed update from the old style SATA SSDs.
My 2014 vintage mainboard (desktop, not portable) has an M.2 socked, but didn't get an M.2 disk to go with in until a month ago. Eight years ago, M.2 was fairly new, so I wouldn't take for granted that a portable is prepared for it, but check it up, and if the machine can handle it, select an M.2.
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Put Linux on it
Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming “Wow! What a Ride!" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Right now I can't. I have many softwares(both FREE & Paid) which are Windows only thing.
But I'm planning Linux for my new laptop in future.
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linux wine might work, for your apps.
Also moving to win 11/10 might break those winders only apps as well. I have a ton that work in wine but don'e work in Windows 10
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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I upgraded my 8 year old HP EliteBook 8770w from W8.1 to W10.
It took me only 15 minutes and everything went smooth
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Have you used the system compatibility checker for Win11? If not, you should as Win11 requires some newish bios features like "secure boot"
On my system, which is relatively new, I had to go into the UEFI settings and enable secure boot before it would accept win11. This is the first machine I've owned that even had that option.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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Between the cost of memory and SSD, you might be 1/2 way to the cost of a new laptop. A buddy bought a $400 HP laptop a couple of weeks ago and it’s surprisingly responsive.
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No do not update your PC (it can actually be worse depending on hardware).
Windows OS is optimized well around a particularly gen of hardware.
Win11 will not work anyway on old stuff & Win10 drivers may end up going through compatibility layers slowing stuff down.
Win10 thread scheduler, ram usage, etc, etc may also be less suited for your older PC hardware.
Unless you're installing p*rn, fake flash players, etc you're not going to run into anything of concern.
Half these security scares in hardware as well I feel are almost excuses to slow things down pushing you to upgrade & spend $$$ to solve problems you will never face.
Like anything, car, TV, console, treat your computer with care and it will continue to function well the way it was designed to with the original OS that aligns with its hardware gen.
I have tons of very hardware ranging from low-mid-high tier from 80s-2022. I stand by what I'm saying from experience with that array of hardware I have.
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Agreed. Use the OS the laptop came with. At MS we always upgraded our laptops to the latest version of Windows and it often went "not well". Sucks to be the alpha testers in real life.
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...for visual studio code that will automatically add comment blocks to all javascript/typescript files in a given folder?
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- When you pry the gun from my cold dead hands, be careful - the barrel will be very hot. - JSOP, 2013
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If I understand your requirement correctly, one way is
- open the folder
- ctrl-click all the javascript/typescript files
- hit the delete key
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JSDoc comments? Document This[^] apparently does a whole file at a time. Not sure whether it will do a whole folder at a time though.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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I haven't received the daily newsletter yesterday or today. I'm guessing there may be some holiday, although Bob isn't dressed for any special occasions
Is there a way to browse previous newsletters?
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Same here - no daily news, no weekly newsletter, no web dev newsletter...
I think the email hamsters have run out of seeds.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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It is in the Ether.
I use Thunderbird for email. For 3 days, it failed to connect to my business O365 account, with a very helpful error message saying that "it failed to connect". I could get the mail through the on line portal so I knew the password hadn't changed. Realizing, after 3 tries, that doing the same thing over and over probably wouldn't work, I did nothing. After 3 days, it started working again, arising from the Ether.
The same thing will probably happen with the news, it will arise from the Ether.
For those who miss it, I will paraphrase it for you:
"Microsoft did it again!"
>64
Some days the dragon wins. Suck it up.
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theoldfool wrote: It is in the Ether.
Well, you should probably stop sniffing[^] it, then.
(And perhaps check that Thunderbird is set to use OAuth 2.0 for your Office 365 account, since MS keep saying they're going to require it soon.)
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Thanks for the tip but I just sprinkled some foo-foo dust on it and all is well.
T'bird is happy. I am semi-happy.
>64
Some days the dragon wins. Suck it up.
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The hamsters weren't fed, they've gone on strike for more seed, or it's a very slow news week.
EDIT: Richard's message beat mine by a (hamster) nose...
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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I'm sure someone must have written a new JS framework over the weekend that can be reported on :P
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Jacquers wrote: Is there a way to browse previous newsletters? Newsletter archive link under "features".
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