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Solve : You and Me drinking 1803 Windows? |
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Answer» Did you drink it? I did and my PC got very sick. You don't have to submit to any Windows upgrade or update if you don't want to, I thought. Insider or not. You can adjust your settings, isn't that right?Windows Insiders have some control over updates. You can choose whether to get them at a Slow pace or a Fast pace. You also have a choice of 3 options for what is actually contained in updates: 1) Just fixes, apps, and drivers, 2) Active development of Windows, or 3) Skip ahead to the next Windows release. I have been in the Insider program since 2015, before the Windows 10 public release, and I have had upwards of 12 builds on my Dell laptop and I have never, ever had a build install except when I chose to. Likewise Windows Updates on mainstream retail Windows.Windows 10 Pro has Group Policies that allow you to decide when Updates and upgrades occur. If you set "Configure Windows Updates" then you still have control over specifically when, or even if, a system get's upgrades, even on insider. I use the setting to prevent surprises. The setting is more or less equivalent to what was available in previous releases of Windows. Windows 10 Home is far more limited in the control is gives the user. And leaves only a few options in terms of preventing updates. You can DEFER for up to 35 days, set your connection as metered to trick windows into not updating, Disable the Windows Update Service - etc. However, Microsoft has gone out of their way to make it quite an ordeal- without exhaustively disabling scheduled tasks and services, a Home system will eventually update and upgrade itself, as there are several scheduled tasks for "Server initiated healing" which effectively 'repair' things like services services and other tasks being disabled, Windows Update among them. It performs these repairs slowly, over time, seemingly in order to avoid detection, as well. The Tasks themselves typically have very high privileges and cannot always be edited even with administrator permissions. I had a heck of a time removing many of them even on Pro.Thanks. I would never have thought the Home version was less controllable. This issues were with the home version. Quote from: Geek-9pm on June 27, 2018, 11:44:55 AM I would never have thought the Home version was less controllable.Home or 'starter' versions tend to be severely cut-down or restricted in a number of areas. For one thing, they are intended for new users, who may be intimidated by too many configuration options, and for another, Microsoft wants your upgrade license money. Quote only mine gave me grief due to the unsupported Intel 600P NVMe SSD it has, so instead of waiting on either Intel or MS to figure that one out, I swapped it to a Samsung EVO SSD and all went well. This is the last thing Geek has to worry about...newer equipment...just sayin. Quote from: patio on June 27, 2018, 01:56:54 PM This is the last thing Geek has to worry about...newer equipment...just sayin.Right! I may never, ever buy a SSD after reading about other people's horror stories. Maybe in seven years Microsoft will be up to speed. Nothin wrong with SSD's...nothin MS is to blame for...as per usual.I have been using 2 SSDs in 2 PCs for the last 3 years. No problems at all. One Samsung Evo, one Sandisk Ultra.Not sure who i'm quoting but..."it ain't the equipment...it's the operator"... |
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