Windows: Microsoft broke the only thing that mattered

Family tech gurus jump ship: “Get a Mac” as Start Menu rage erupts

TLDR: The piece says Windows lost its status as the safe, default choice after privacy‑scaring AI features, a massive 2024 outage, and nagging upgrades. The comments explode: ex‑Windows helpers now urge Macs, others call the article clickbait, and a price fight breaks out—why it matters: trust in the “default” is cracking.

The internet’s “family IT people” are sounding the alarm, and the comments are pure chaos. The article claims Microsoft broke the one thing that mattered—trust—by pushing gimmicky AI and messy upgrades. Folks point to the ill‑fated Windows “Recall” feature (it screenshotted everything you did), the massive 2024 CrowdStrike fiasco that froze millions of PCs and flights, and Microsoft ending Windows 10 support while pestering users to move to Windows 11. Meanwhile, Apple dropping a headline‑grabbing “$599 MacBook” poured gasoline on the fire.

The hottest take? Switch to Mac yesterday. One longtime Windows booster says the Windows 11 Start Menu is “user hostile” and now tells everyone, even dad, to go Mac. Another camp claims the article itself is clickbait—one commenter calls it “almost certainly LLM‑generated”—and mocks its vibes. Then there’s the price drama: a commenter drops a single dagger, “Pardon?”, at the claim that a MacBook Air starts at $1,099 vs. $400 Windows laptops, while others argue that build quality beats bargain bins.

Microsoft leadership also takes heat, with one zinger saying Satya Nadella “doesn’t care” about Windows anymore. And for good measure, a drive‑by quip marvels that some people still “love Windows” at all. The memes write themselves: press F for the Start Menu, “AI that remembers your secrets,” and “default OS no more.” Whether you’re a switcher, a skeptic, or just here for the popcorn, the community’s verdict is clear: the trust broke, and the comments are where it shattered.

Key Points

  • The article states Windows holds roughly 72–73% of desktop market share and is deeply embedded in critical infrastructure.
  • It cites the July 2024 CrowdStrike update failure as disabling ~8.5 million Windows machines and disrupting flights, hospitals, and 911 centers.
  • Microsoft attempted to introduce the Windows 11 “Recall” feature that captured screen images; after privacy concerns, the rollout was paused.
  • The article claims Microsoft ended Windows 10 support in October 2025 and that Windows 10 still had 44.68% share in December 2025.
  • It notes Apple introduced a $599 MacBook, framing increased competitive pressure on Windows’ traditional value proposition.

Hottest takes

"almost certainly LLM-generated to get clicks" — lich_king
"I cannot say to buy a Mac fast enough" — smithcoin
"Satya Nadella doesn’t care in the slightest" — andrewstuart
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