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| Windows 10 1511, 10586 warning |
| Iniciado por guest, 17,nov. 2015 06:30 - 4 respuestas |
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| Publicado el 17,noviembre 2015 - 06:30 |
Just a warning. I have a program, written in WinDev, that cycles through several large media files. Before this upgrade, moving from one file to the next was very fast. After the upgrade, it would sometimes take as long as seven seconds for the next file to begin playing.
Using another blank SSD, I installed a virgin copy of Windows 10 using the 1511,10586 iso's that Microsoft just made available. Then I applied all available updates and loaded the same program, The movement between files was just as fast as before the upgrade.
The 10586 upgrade would have been called a service pack in times past. It is a major update. However, as has happened to me many times before, the safest route seems again to install a new image, rather than accept the upgrade. The only problem is that Microsoft now does this for (to) you without asking. |
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| Publicado el 19,noviembre 2015 - 06:48 |
| 1511,10586 was released, what, 8 days ago. At that time I was able to create a usb stick using the Microsoft media creator that was the 10586 version. When I tried the same today, it installed the old release to manufacturing build and forcing you to go through the update process. I just checked and the update now cycles though large files correctly. It is interesting that when I downloaded four days ago, the release # returned by "winver" was 10586.3. Today, after the install and upgrade, the release # is 10586.11. |
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| Publicado el 19,noviembre 2015 - 13:34 |
HI,
Another problem: After upgrading my workstation to Windows 10 the connection to a remote HFSQL server has become so terribly slow that a timeout occurs. In Windows 7 there was no problem. Being unable to solve this, I had to revert back to Windows 7.
Regards, Piet |
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| Publicado el 19,noviembre 2015 - 20:15 |
Hi Piet,
can´t confirm that. (WD14 with HFSQL15).
It´s the same speed (over internet with compression on) |
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| Publicado el 23,noviembre 2015 - 16:39 |
The saga continues: As of today (Nov 23 2015), Microsoft has pulled the ISO images for Threshold 2. There is some indication that they have stopped the Windows Update process for this update as well. I found several other serious issues being reported after doing a Google search.
Personally, I have reverted to Windows 8.1 with Classic Shell on all my upgraded development computers. Just can't use an OS with 'forced' upgrades when the vendor has proven unable to properly vet an upgrade before making it available. This is the biggest problem I have with Windows 10. In all sorts of ways it takes control away from the user and assumes that all use cases can fit into it's increasingly narrow vision of how a user should interact with the computer and what purposes are appropriate for a computer system.
From a marketing perspective I understand why they are doing what they are doing. From a technical perspective, I really am wishing for a "Classic Coke" version of the Windows OS, minimum pre-defined functionality with maximum configuration options. Many of the new features I would like -- if I had the option of whether or not to enable them |
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