IT administrators are "fed up" with Microsoft's "useless" apps and Windows 11

Admins say Windows 11 is a mess — and the comments are absolutely roasting Microsoft

TLDR: A frustrated IT admin said a Microsoft update broke key work software, adding to growing anger over Windows 11 and Microsoft’s app chaos. In the comments, people swung between furious roasting, weary jokes about being trapped, and a backlash from readers who said the whole outrage story was overblown.

Microsoft may be rolling out fixes and fresh features for Windows 11, but the people stuck dealing with it every day sound completely over it. The spark this time was a frustrated IT worker on Reddit saying a recent security update broke a critical business app, while removing that update caused Microsoft 365 programs like Word and Outlook to stop working in remote setups. Translation: pick your disaster. And in classic internet fashion, commenters instantly turned that pain into a full-on pile-on about Microsoft's habit of pushing shiny extras like Copilot while basic reliability still feels shaky.

The mood in the community? Somewhere between exhausted and feral. One commenter called the whole Windows-plus-app-management experience a full-time job full of footguns, basically saying that even simple tasks now feel like a maze of duplicate settings, app stores, and licensing traps. Another went for the bleak joke that admins are just there to do work, "no think" — a snarky little grenade that sums up how powerless many feel inside Microsoft's giant ecosystem.

But not everyone was ready to join the rage parade. On Hacker News, one critic rolled their eyes at the whole article, asking why a story based on a Reddit rant was being treated like serious news at all. That sparked the classic meta-drama: is Microsoft the real mess here, or is the internet just addicted to complaining? Either way, one thing is clear: for a lot of admins, Windows 11 isn't just software right now — it's a source of daily comic misery.

Key Points

  • Neowin says Microsoft has recently introduced Windows 11 changes, including Start menu updates, new policies, and a major fix for a long-standing UI bug on some PCs.
  • The article states that not all Microsoft updates or design changes have been positively received, citing earlier backlash over a Windows 10 system specifications page design.
  • It highlights a Reddit report claiming that a recent Microsoft security patch broke authentication for Microsoft 365 apps in Remote Desktop Services environments.
  • The article presents this reported patch issue as especially disruptive because it allegedly affected both a key business app and Office 365 usage options.
  • It also cites criticism of Microsoft Graph PowerShell, with a commenter attributing command complexity to wrapper-based design around the Graph API and rushed implementation tied to AzureAD module deprecation deadlines.

Hottest takes

"locked into the ecosystem and Microsoft isn’t listening" — reactordev
"a full time job full of footguns" — omh
"Stop posting such drivel" — 0x1d7
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