Ugh, I'm trying not to think about it. I can't believe support for 10 is ending next year, when it was billed as their "last" OS. I'm holding out hope that they'll extend it at the last minute. Windows 11 is making it so that many perfectly good PCs are no longer usable. There's probably extended support that business can purchase.
For my main desktop, I currently have Windows 10. I suppose I could just upgrade it to 11, although I will want to read about privacy settings and whatnot first. The annoying part though is that Windows reports my PC doesn't meet the requirements for 11. But it does! I think it's because of a setting in the BIOS when Windows first checked, and now I can't seem to get it to recheck. Not a big deal if I do a clean install. But I really don't feel like doing a clean install. I think I'd rather just do an in place upgrade to 11. So I'd have to figure out that issue first.
For my secondary desktop, this is where it gets annoying. It's an older i7 rig that doesn't meet the requirements for 11. I know there's work arounds to force install 11, but I'm not sure I want to do that. I planned for this when I installed 10, and partitioned the SSD so that I have half left over for Linux. So what I may end up doing is dual-booting 10 and Linux. Although it might be annoying to have to restart my PC if I need to use a Windows app real fast. So I'm not yet sure what I'm gonna do here. The real annoying thing is that I sometimes like to use this PC for GoG and Steam games. Which, I'd have to keep it online for that. This was my old main desktop, so it's sort of like a free desktop here. I wouldn't want to spend the money on a new build just so I can get Windows 11.
For my laptop, I guess it's just really old at this point. I do have a SSD with 10 on it, and it definitely doesn't support 11. I have another SSD for it with Mint. Just for convenience, I would occasionally use it with 10. Or if I want to use a random Windows app that I don't totally trust, I'll use it there. I'll probably just keep my Win 10 SSD offline, and use it for sketchy apps if I must. But most of the time it'll just run Linux Mint going forward.
This reminds me, I have to check on my parent's desktop. It's something I built for them, but I have no idea if it supports 11 or not.
Mostly, the end of support for 10 is just a big inconvenience for me.
edit: Hmm, very annoying. On my main desktop, apparently the default BIOS settings didn't have the correct settings for Secure Boot. So when I installed Win 10 it did it in such a way as to not support Secure Boot. Now that I have the correct settings in the UEFI, Windows still detects that Secure Boot is not supported because of the way the OS was installed. You can convert your Windows install from legacy to UEFI using a built in tool. I'd be a little nervous to do it though, apparently it converts the MBR to GPT. So if it fucks up, then you're fucked!
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/win ... 1405f800d7
another edit: I went through my purchase history on NewEgg, and my parent's computer that I built them definitely doesn't support Windows 11.

Doesn't have secure book, TPM or a supported processor.
What do you guys think about circumventing the requirements? My only fear is that one day Microsoft will flip a switch and take away the ability to use 11 on such machines.