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Windows 10

Well, the first two upgrades having gone well, when I got prompted on my old Windows 7 laptop to upgrade I thought I'd go ahead. It's been sitting twiddling its thumbs for over twelve hours now, with no obvious signs of progress.
 
I had two laptops get notification of the update on the same day. They were both Windows 7. The one I really want to change - the Windows 8 one, is still waiting...
 
Er, are you kidding? Acid2 displays fine, which is hardly surprising, since MS achieved that minimum level of acceptability (in IE) back in 2007*. I found someone on twitter with the same complaint and a screenshot, and I could replicate their issue by changing the zoom level, but...

http://www.webstandards.org/action/acid2/

Sure, Chrome supports "more", but you can't really have thought Edge was that bad...

*Which isn't evidence, since Edge isn't really IE, but what's with the italics in 'still fail' when it hasn't been an issue for nearly eight years?
Ack, my zoom level was 120%. Good catch.
 
Well, the first two upgrades having gone well, when I got prompted on my old Windows 7 laptop to upgrade I thought I'd go ahead. It's been sitting twiddling its thumbs for over twelve hours now, with no obvious signs of progress.

Still "Working on it..." after 24 hours.
 
Never mind start buttons, menus or whatever, the big question for any new version of Windows is whether finally, finally (I use Mollsoft freecalc anyway) the built in calculator is resizeable?
 
Never mind start buttons, menus or whatever, the big question for any new version of Windows is whether finally, finally (I use Mollsoft freecalc anyway) the built in calculator is resizeable?

Seems to be :jaw-dropp
 
It's easier to use the "Media Creation Tool."

Don't even need to create any media or anything. :-)

-- Roger


This is my second time through. It failed the first time for video driver issues. Now it has 'disk' drive issues. Drive C is an almost full SSD, and Drive D is a micro SD drive.

I've freeing up space and doing general housekeeping.

I guess I should point-out that this is a free Dell tablet that I got when I bought a new laptop last summer. If the update totally fails, I got what I paid for.

ETA: The new laptop upgraded to WIN10 flawlessly, and appears to have solved some network issues that have been plaguing me since I got it. I have one more computer (an older WIN7 laptop) to upgrade before this is all done, but I want that WIN8.1 tablet done first.
 
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So why is this free?

What am I going to find out later that makes me mad I can't revert back to 7 after a month?


It's free because WIN 8.0 was a debacle of biblical proportions. What were they thinking?

Microsoft is trying to regain whatever confidence their customer base had in the past.

My company has 10,000 employees worldwide, and our official policy is that Windows 8.x is not supported.
 
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So why is this free?

What am I going to find out later that makes me mad I can't revert back to 7 after a month?

John Jones explanation above is only part of the reason, I think. There are lots of theories and I don't think Microsoft has confirmed any of them. But here are some ideas:
1. Widespread adoption of Windows 10 provides a platform for them to sell aps to. They have already made lame attempts at this with their attempts to sell solitaire. I think they'll do better at is as time goes on.
2. The widespread adoption of a single platform will reduce their support costs.
3. It leaves open the possibility over the long term to charge people for regular updates.
4. As John Jones explained above the failure of the world to adopt Windows 8 was a festering problem for Microsoft. The Windows 8 debacle lost them market share and it must have really pissed off their partners who probably sped up efforts to get non-Microsoft platforms out the door.
5. Google already gives their OS away for mobile aps. It would be pretty hard for MS to compete with that if they continued to charge for theirs.
6. MS can make a few bucks by controlling the default applications for some things. More installed OS's the more MS can make from this kind of thing.
7. One of the grand strategies behind the Windows 8 debacle was the Microsoft dream that people would think it nice to have the same OS on their mobile devices as their desktops. MS has not abandoned that idea and their theory is probably more Windows 10 installs equals more people buying MS mobile platforms.
ETA: This is related to item 4, but widespread adoption of Windows 10 on people's old machine will make it more likely that when people buy new machines they will by one with an MS OS and MS is still charging for OEM licensing.

As to what is going to make you mad in the future about MS and Windows 10:
That's an interesting issue. I'm already disappointed that they chose not to support Windows Media Center since that is the heart of our home entertainment system. I have Vista on my desktop and MS won't update Windows Live photo gallery and they blocked my version of Vista from being used as a Windows Media Center extender.

So overall MS is often not very nice. They failed to own up to bugs that make Vista update a horrendous experience. They take stuff away when you update the OS and some of that might piss you off.

So what do people think MS is going to do to piss off Windows 10 users as time goes on? The automatic update issues are already pissing off quite a few people right now.
 
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