π
β¬
οΈ Legacy Update 1.12 is a huge rewrite release. We switched from compiling with Visual C++ 2008 (and 2010, and 2017, and 2022β¦), a setup which Microsoft recently broke, to a streamlined open-source MinGW/GCC toolchain. The result: 1.12 is 50% smaller than 1.11, which was already below 1 MB! https://github.com/LegacyUpdate/LegacyUpdate/releases/tag/v1.12.0.0
One of the many gifts we got out of the Epstein files is details of Steve Sinofskyβs exit from Microsoft in 2012. We learn that the Surface RT was selling only 10% of the low-end of their predicted sales numbers, he was being pushed out, and Epstein was coaching him on negotiating an exit package.
He leaked internal Microsoft email threads to Epstein, where they were discussing the $900 million write-off of unsold Surface RTs. He negotiated to exit with $14 million in stock, which we knew about at the time, but itβs absolutely wild to learn who was involved, and the inner workings of it.
Windows 8 is the first product launch I properly remember. I was sick on the day of the Build 2011 keynote, so I stayed home and watched it. I ran all the betas and was excited for how Windows was changing. We were promised a new era with nicely-designed apps and a far better experience for developers, but they utterly flubbed all of it by being so confident in selfish things.
They were so sure the entire 27-year-old Windows ecosystem would magically reconfigure itself around Windows 8-only full-screen apps. They were even more sure they could sell tablets that could ONLY run apps from the Store that didnβt exist yet - or ever. Of course it wasnβt going to work. Why would it?
All of those RT tablets, which other brands also sold, are ewaste now. The Store is shut down, you canβt sideload apps because the licensing server is also gone. They pulled the plug on releasing Windows 10 for them. Without jailbreaking, you canβt do anything other than doodle in Paint or write a document in Word.
Itβs maddening that someone can cost the company almost $1 billion on a product ANYONE could have told you wasnβt it. Itβs even more maddening they can get a $14 million+ reward for so obviously missing the mark.
Yeah, thereβs so much more thatβs way more serious out of the files, but this one was relevant to my life. It adds another piece to the story of how I first learned that companies with all the capital in the world will get greedy and let you down.
https://www.neowin.net/news/former-windows-chief-shared-internal-secrets-with-jeffrey-epstein-documents-reveal/
#epstein #windows
In 2009, Microsoft made it a focus of the Windows 7 user experience guidelines to reduce pointless notifications. They point out notifications like the classic βThere are unused icons on your desktopβ as being in the Windows XP Hall of Shameβ’
. Seriously, itβs in there: https://learn.microsoft.com/windows/win32/uxguide/mess-notif
In 2026, Windows interrupts you to ask if you want to clean up printers you havenβt used in a while. The intent is unclear (which printers?), there are too many choices, and it stays visible until you click an option.
For a good while, Microsoft were limping their way to good UX, and this doc was finally a clear set of guidelines. Now, it feels like theyβve slipped back into the Windows XP Hall of Shameβ’
era, and any good UX they happen to come up with is an accident.
#windows #windows11
π
β¬
οΈ Legacy Update 1.12 is a huge rewrite release. We switched from compiling with Visual C++ 2008 (and 2010, and 2017, and 2022β¦), a setup which Microsoft recently broke, to a streamlined open-source MinGW/GCC toolchain. The result: 1.12 is 50% smaller than 1.11, which was already below 1 MB! https://github.com/LegacyUpdate/LegacyUpdate/releases/tag/v1.12.0.0