I was very reluctant switching from win xp to win 7. Unless the 64bit era would have forced me I rather would have stayed put.
New software is really not adding much to the table after some point of completion since the software companies seems to mostly add pet feutures and user hostile fads be it star menu, complete gui changes, 'enterprise' admin lookout or ads and tracking.
E.g. Facebooks 1000s of developers seem to add a net of antifeutures to their site. On Netflix you can't even disable autoplay.
It is the same really for software moving to remote mainframes. The companies rather hide and burry the old desktop versions deep.
New software is really not adding much to the table after some point of completion since the software companies seems to mostly add pet feutures and user hostile fads be it star menu, complete gui changes, 'enterprise' admin lookout or ads and tracking.
E.g. Facebooks 1000s of developers seem to add a net of antifeutures to their site. On Netflix you can't even disable autoplay.
It is the same really for software moving to remote mainframes. The companies rather hide and burry the old desktop versions deep.