Microsoft used to be a household name for software, but honestly, it’s become a symbol of frustration. From constant updates that seem to break more than they fix, to bloated software that eats up your computer’s resources, Microsoft is just not the company it once was. Windows 10 and 11 are prime examples of how to turn an operating system into an endless cycle of bugs, glitches, and unwanted changes.The whole Microsoft ecosystem feels outdated and poorly optimized. The fact that you need to force-close apps to make the system responsive after a “normal” update is ridiculous. And let’s not even talk about Microsoft Office. While other companies have embraced cloud services and more flexible software, Microsoft is stuck trying to push bloated, overpriced packages that still feel trapped in the early 2000s.Don’t even get me started on the infamous Windows updates that always seem to happen at the most inconvenient times — and, more often than not, they break something that was working perfectly fine before. It’s like Microsoft has forgotten what it means to be user-friendly or efficient.At this point, Microsoft is just a corporate giant squeezing out every penny they can while offering minimal innovation. The company’s products feel like they’re designed more to lock you into their ecosystem than to actually make life easier. It’s hard to take Microsoft seriously anymore.