Windows 11

Be careful with those outboards, especially if they are your primary storage or primary backup. Just talked to a good friend on the "left coast" who left his 8Tb backup drive plugged in his "hot swap" overnight. Windows 11 (or something else related) decided to reboot, and the drive lost its identity. No drive letter, no data. Luckily, he had most of the data on a separate machine, scattered across several 1Tb outboard and "hot swap" drives. He reformatted the 8Tb, and it seems to work properly, again.

I usually leave any backup or storage drives unplugged unless I'm currently using them. He doesn't leave the 8Tb plugged in now, either.
 
FWIW: I've got 2 Dell desktops that are running WIN10 and Office 2007. They are clones of one another, so if one PC takes a hit I have a total backup to replace it. also have 2 laptops that are running Win11 and Office 2007. The Dells are not upgradeable to WIN11. I'll probably pay for support on the Dells after Oct. My biggest squawk with WIN10/11 is the GUI. It's like a cartoon checkers game. So I use a program called Classic Shell on all the aforementioned computers to that restores the user interface to the appearance and functionality of WIN7 or WIN10, your choice.
 
My upgrade to W11 on a Dell machine was seamless. You should have no issues as others have stated. I did purchase an Apple Macbook Air recently at the new lower prices. The Dell will be my last windows machine so I am slowly learning the ropes with the Apple and transitioning files over. I already use an iPhone and iPad so that has been a big help.
Also words of advice, BACKUP, BACKUP, BACKUP.......
 
I learned it's a lot easier if you keep up with things as they come along. It's easier to adapt to several smaller changes than one really big one. The newer software is more secure and crashes less running newer stuff.

If you don't like it you don;t have to use it. There are several alternatives. Mac OS, Chromebook, Linux. I gave up on Windows and went to Linux, and now just a Chromebook. Though I think the days of $99 Chromebooks are over. Of course that would be and even bigger change.
 
I had 10, Microsoft did one of those upgrades and I likely have 11. Things are a bit different. Maybe 10.5?

Question: What's a "hot swap"? I've been using an 8T backup that continually updates and don't want to lose the stuff that's on there.
 
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