This question was inspired by my hatred of Temporal Anti-Aliasing which, in many games nowadays, is poorly used as a performance bandaid. On lower resolutions it will smudge and blur the image and certain bad cases of TAA will cause visible ghosting.

Yet in spite of all this, certain games won’t let you turn it off or have hair/fur/foliage look like dogshit without it so sometimes I still use it.

      • @[email protected]
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        391 year ago

        I hate to break it to you, but the stuff MS added to Windows comprises literally all of Windows.

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          Ehhh not really. On consumer devices yes, but when you start dealing with automated deployment and group policy and things like that, you can automate disabling telemetry services.

          Now if you’re using something like azure or intune, you just have control of the spyware.

          • netburnr
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            1 year ago

            If you’re on M365 you get the added hit of them renaming portals, moving or downright removing settings. God forbid ymthe setting you need is powershell only and not ocumented online, cause support doesn’t even know their own products.

            • @[email protected]
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              41 year ago

              Yeah…. The double edged sword of cloud infrastructure is that you have to rely on them not to fuck it up.

              Less of an issue with AWS

      • @[email protected]
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        131 year ago

        I’ve always felt theres multiple sides to Microsoft. Theres devs making a damn good and simple product. Then comes the enterprise devs that over-engineer the product. Then theres the marketing coming in and try to buy up competition or bundle the product with other products to force it on people (MS way of advertising). And THEN the suits either ruin the product for money or shutting it down for not either making enough money or for not helping their enterprise products make money (like for example VSCode is a product that helps MS make money on Azure).