Personally, I think both. It really depends on the root cause of the issue. Another thing to consider is that there are probably not that many Rainmeter users that have the said LTSC version, in order to be able to replicate the issue and investigate what can be done about it (obviously, if serious, by the developers). In any case, with Windows in general we're only talking about its stable / "final" versions, since the rest are full of "experiments", some of them going well, some of them not that well.> If the changes are permanent, Rainmeter would have to be adjusted to compensate (if possible), and if the changes are bugs then it's up to Microsoft to correct these (if needed)
Not really sure what this means in terms of the path forward? Are we waiting for the final LTSC release to see if it's fixed, and if not, Rainmeter will try to mitigate? Or are we waiting for Rainmeter devs to investigate & see if it can be mitigated?
Statistics: Posted by Yincognito — Today, 6:30 pm