it runs all apps,works with all hardware even “unsuppoted” ones with rufus.

it has pretty ui,great antivirus,and its free if you know where to look.

runs all games,can be customized with group policy and registery. gets latest game ready drivers,new gpus and hardware work on it instantly no wait for community to make it work.

no community needed you can just go to microsoft forums,or ai bec most windows problems are easy to solve.

great backwards compatibility.

extremely stable and never crashes

  • over_clox@lemmy.world
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    29 days ago

    LOLz in Windows XP registry, I’ve got a little over half a megabyte of custom registry tweaks that I’ve carefully crafted for Windows XP systems, to streamline it to the max, lock it down and make it about as private as humanly possible. Almost a whole megabyte if you count my MicroXP specific tweaks.

    I even made sure to disable Terminal Services, Background Intelligent Transfer Services, Automatic Updates, File and Printer Sharing, and basically any useless service that anyone in their sane mind should disable if still using XP for whatever reason (mostly virtual machine use here).

    Anything past XP in a VM for legacy software, I’m running Linux Mint MATE as my actual daily runner.

    Still funny you’d say that seasoned Windows users never tweak the registry, I ate it up and spit out the whole system configuration the way I wanted.

      • LostWanderer@fedia.io
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        29 days ago

        I find config files to be the safest thing to modify because the results are often predictable and don’t cause my heart rate to increase.

    • LostWanderer@fedia.io
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      29 days ago

      Well, XP was generally less complex, and rarely had any problems in my opinion. I personally think registry edits got riskier past XP up until 10…When it became a bigger gamble (especially using Vista,7,8).

      I opted for Pro version and local policy was the safer option. I guess my experience was WAY different. Could be hardware or a few mistyped entries, little bit of both, I suppose.

      • over_clox@lemmy.world
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        29 days ago

        My basic registry philosophy, aside from the obvious do a lotta fuckin research was to track all the default settings, configure everything the way I want, and save all the registry values for the settings I changed.

        My bigger registry philosophy was to research all the possible values under major registry keys, even hidden ones not available as any convenient Control Panel GUI option. Configure all that to my liking as well, and backup my entire configuration. Well, whatever differs from defaults anyways.

        Then, whenever I’d install XP on another system, I could just import a small handful of registry files and have 99.9℅ of everything already configured my way.

        I could easily merge all that into a single registry file, but I broke it down into major basic categories, like Interface, Services, etc…

        • LostWanderer@fedia.io
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          29 days ago

          I certainly tried my best with the research part and often succeeded on XP more than any other Windows version. I think it was a bit overwhelming for me at the time because I somewhat understood computers, needed human language to demystify the kind computers could use for specific modifications and tasks. I am starting to reach that point with Linux, I didn’t get there 100% with Windows, knew just enough to get by.