
Thus, I have to stick to Windows 11 and try to make it feel right like at home. I have been waiting for those improvements for ages in Windows 10 2004, 20H2, 21H1 and they never came.
Timeline is removed and in its place is the classical GNOME Overview-like interface which makes my WinOverview2 application unnecessary. support for GPU compute applications in WSL2. support for GUI apps in WSL2 using WSLg. hover over the maximize button of any window and a suggestion pops up with different layouts in which you can arrange the windows on your screen) when undocking a laptop, apps minimize, and then when connecting back, they are restored to where hey originally were) improvements in how applications on multiple monitors are handled (i.e. Also, I could go back to Windows 10, but I actually really enjoy the fact that Windows 11 is based on a much newer Windows build (22000 vs 19043) and that means it comes with a couple of improvements I really really like: I tried living with the new taskbar, but the productivity losses were much greater than what I gained. ability to show labels for running tasks. ability to open files in respective applications by dragging the file onto the taskbar icon of an app. ability to launch Task Manager from the right click menu. the ability to ungroup taskbar buttons and show a button for each window. While it looks nice, it removes a ton of functionality users have come to depend on since it was introduced 20 or so years ago in Windows NT 4, like: As you probably know already, Windows 11, among other changes, comes with a new and revamped taskbar.