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Microsoft keeps insisting that it's deeply committed to the quality of Windows 11


in reply to Powderhorn

Commitment to quality doesn't really mean anything. Generally you are lead to thinking good quality, but he could mean bad quality.
in reply to Huffkin

Yah I've heard enough "commitments" from corporations to know that it's written on toilet paper. Let me know when they actually change things, until then it's empty words
in reply to Powderhorn

anything a company says is a lie, or apology for because caught lying and performing illegal activities.

idgaf what ANY company says or claims, they should have no voice

in reply to Powderhorn

This isn't even a "lie". It's worse than that: it's an empty statement misleading readers to see meaning where there's none.

Commitment is intentions. Even between human beings, you don't know someone else's intentions, at most what they claim about them; so there's no way to check if the "I'm committed to $thing" claim is true or false. But to make it even worse, a company is not a human being, it is simply an abstraction, unable to have "intentions".

So, let's call bread "bread" and wine "wine": people working for Microslop noticed it's being called "Microslop", they know why, and they're trying to minimise brand damage — trying to convince you that Microslop does not output slop, and that the Moon is made of green cheese. That's it.

in reply to Powderhorn

They're truly committed to low quality
in reply to Powderhorn

I can tell you by being forced to use it on my work laptops that this is a fucking lie. But, we already know that because Satia Nadella already said so. That the OS wasn't their priority anymore. It was cloud services and AI.