So I was browsing around and found out that Windows 11 was being released, and in that same headline it talked about how there is a TPM (Trusted Platform Module) requirement for 11 that meant many "old" PCs wouldn't be able to use it and many Windows 10 machines wouldn't be able to upgrade. "It's a bold strategy, Cotton. Let's see if it pays off for them." I'm probably overblowing it. People upgrade their PCs more often than ever and this probably won't hurt Microsoft that much. Very few people care: if it works, who cares? I along with many consumers were... disenchanted with the idea of forced OS updates in Windows 10. That lack of control of my own hardware and how sluggish and bloated and just worse the Windows 10 experience was especially without an SSD installation compelled me to switch to using Linux Mint full-time. So I've missed out on a few games I purchased on Steam (thankfully a Star Wars bundle that I already played or didn't really care about). Once I was able to permanently move my disc ripping/converting setup to Mint, I never had the urge to log into 10 again. I guess it's still not set in stone, but I don't trust OSes that lock out certain chipsets for some "security" reason. I mean I guess they did something similar with Secure Boot/UEFI. I guess this was the next logical step. I'm probably being a pessimist, but it seems like everything is just getting worse and worse. Amazon sucks. Prime 2-day delivery is just defunct. Their workers piss in any container they can find. I watched Super Size Me 2 and while I don't eat chicken, that whole industry is sadness and death with CEOs of huge companies being the only happy ones. When did ethics in business become so unpopular? When did screwing over the customer become so popular? When did companies stop truly competing with each other and why is their collusion ignored? I'm glad I switched to Linux Mint a while ago.