LOL. Just wait until MS gets ready to drop support of Win10. Over time, all your MS and other commercial software will require Win11.
Personally I consider Win11 just a poorly-named "Windows 10 Release 21H2". The TPM2 and other changes are no more disruptive than all the things done at WinXP SP2, which broke a ton of software, remember that ruckus?
They had the perfect setup to leave well enough alone and let people stop saying "Windows 10" and start saying "Windows" and everyone would know what they meant, because there was only Win10. But NOOOOOOOO...
I think this is yet another example of Microsoft's Marketing people not being able to find their a$$ with both hands, a flashlight, and a map. They have reversed themselves and confused their message so many times in the past 25 years that I've long since lost count.
Now they've broken the "Windows 10 Forever" promise, so I the next time they change a few things around, we'll get Windows 12.
And the time after that... Windows 13? Oh yeah, right, that'll go over well. :-)
That is the kind of comment that I was hoping for. And I do not have a problem with what you or the author of the piece are saying. But Microsoft is not going to drop support for Windows 10 for another four years. So we should have a stable experience in Windows 10 for another four years.
People who want the latest bells and whistles can opt for Windows 11. I do not have a problem with this. People like me who have a processor that didn't make the list won't have to put up with constant nags from Microsoft like we did most recently from 7 to 10.
That said I have been playing enough with my Windows 11 virtual machine to say that it actually seems pretty nice. Although I have to admit that I have tweaked it some to make it more familiar. I like the Windows button over on the left bottom corner of my screen and put it back where it belongs and several other “features” have been corrected as well.