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De
07/12/2021 15:24:02
Lutz Scheffler (En ligne)
Lutz Scheffler Software Ingenieurbüro
Dresden, Allemagne
 
 
À
07/12/2021 15:19:21
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Actualités
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
01682901
Message ID:
01682915
Vues:
50
>>>>>I think I will soon have to replace my Windows 10 desktop, and I'm wondering if it would be better to stay with Win 10 as opposed to getting a Windows 11 pc.
>>>>>
>>>>>Do we have any feedback yet on whether our VFP apps will have any difficulty on the Win 11 platform?
>>>>>
>>>>>Would like to hear your feedback and opinions on 10 vs 11.
>>>>>
>>>>>Thanks,
>>>>>Rich Murillo
>>>>>
>>>>>Has anyone used Thor tools in Windows 11?
>>>>>Regards Eugen
>>>>
>>>>I have used Win11 on three different machines for several months, and I haven't experienced any problems at all. The only problem I have heard of, is VFP9 and general fields, a combination we have warned about since the last millennium, for several reasons.
>>>>
>>>>So my conclusion is that there is absolutely no reason to wait with the upgrade.
>>>
>>>The primary reason I've not preformed the upgrade to Windows 11 is that my current rig doesn't meet the specs for it (CPU too old, no TPM, etc.). Will be switching over to Windows 11 once I get a new computer. I've no doubt that I'll probably have to put up with some inconveniences (I've heard user toolbars feature was removed in Windows 11).
>>
>>If you don't care if M$ will remove the feature on later upgrades. There are 3 (official) reg keys and it installs on anything. I can provide the reg files. (different stuff for vanilla or upgrade.)
>>I wait some years, as on every M$ product, until it's out of the cradle. I'm not the early bird eaten by the cat. :)
>
>I am indeed well aware of the registry patches to bypass some of those requirements, but I'd prefer to avoid using such measures -- there's the chance that such "hacks" will stop working after an update (and chances are, when it does happen, it will happen at the most inopportune time).

Wouldn't call it a hack - MS must have programmed something to use it, so it is a feature. Just tracing the upgrade with Process Monitor, and you see where it fails to find a key isn't hacking. :)
Anyway, I fully agree with your point to avoid it. Maybe I switch to Win10 next year.
Words are given to man to enable him to conceal his true feelings.
Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord

Weeks of programming can save you hours of planning.

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