this post was submitted on 30 Jul 2025
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I seem to remember the feature was opt-in, right?
I'd check, but this hasn't made it to my Copilot+ PC, despite all the fuss.
Microsoft style opt-in probably. You can choose between Yes and Later
And no matter what you choose, they'll silently enable it next month
Not how it's worked with the rest of these features, for the record. I did get click-to-do, which is activated by default (but does nothing unless you trigger it manually). That's just an entry in their increasingly large wall of "stuff you don't want switches" in the Settings.
It's immensely wasteful in terms of dev time, but at the same time, hey, kudos for having all this stuff centralized in the one list, unwieldy as it's getting (at least there's a search in there).
I wish we could talk like adults about these things over here, because there's a ton of interesting nuance to how Windows 11 actually works, rather than the parody version that everybody loves to dunk on. There are some actually good features and choices I'd like to see make the jump to Linux and vice versa, even discounting things like hardware or software support. But nobody ever wants to have that conversation, it's all just the dopamine hit chase from rooting for the home team (and/or being contrarian about it).
i want to have that conversation, tell me about the good features and choices
I'm not sure I buy your motivations, but hey, I can oblige regardless. What, top three small things from Windows I'd like on Linux and the other way around? Windows to Linux first?
Hibernation and states across boots. I know people hate Windows power management on laptops, but at least on my last couple of desktops it's been surprisingly robust. I can come back overnight to the same setup I left open, even if an update ran in the middle. Same windows, tabs, open documents... It even survives booting into Linux and then coming back just fine. KDE is taking some steps in this direction, but they're a ways away. I hope they progress quickly on it.
Scaling and multimonitor. It's way better than it used to be, but there are still a ton of minor annoyances on Linux. KDE in particular has some issues with icon scaling on vertical taskbars, which you'd think would be easy to fix but have been there for a while now. Other pieces of software still struggle with consistent text and headers, too, especially on multimonitor setups with different fractional scaling. Say what you will about Windows' look and feel (and I will in a sec), the compositing is super robust and flexible.
Mounts! Network mounts in particular and Samba mounts specifically. You just click on them, authenticate and you can mount them as either a folder or a drive right from the context menu. On Linux, Dolphin will give you access to them the same way within itself, but they won't be mounted to the fs in a predictable way, so it's fine for copy/pasting stuff but it's not good if you want to use them as local folders. And Windows will remember those mounts across sessions, authentication included. On Linux you need to edit fstab manually and keep a plaintext copy of your SMB password. It's just so smooth on Windows.
So... Linux to Windows next?
Just the snappy window movement, man. Linux feels so much lighter than Windows for no good reason. I also really like both Gnome's more Mac-like desktop and KDE's default "hold shift to tile" window snapping. Windows used to be the gold standard for window management without going full tiling but I'd say I prefer KDE now.
Vertical taskbars/no taskbars. I don't understand why Windows decided to force the taskbar to the bottom. It's just absurd for ultrawide screens and inconvenient for tablets and touchscreens, or for screens with burn-in issues. I'd argue KDE overcorrects. You don't need to have a dozen different docks per desktop, but it's definitely better than zero options. And the top bar is great for touch and more reliable than sliding from the bottom edge to pop up a hidden taskbar on Windows.
Remote desktop everywhere. Gnome in particular has fantastic out-of-the-box support. Windows' version of this is actually very good, too, but the server is paywalled to the Pro license, which is hard to justify. And hey, I get it, they're trying to monetize their OS but that's actually worse, so...
Now, that was a tangent, but if more people want to share their top 3's I'll read them. What the hell.