BoboBrazil
Member
Can I use one of the isos floating around to update a surface pro 1 using windows rt 8.1?
Read the user agreement.
Maybe drivers will change later, but no word on that yet.
It appears that automatic driver updates do not give the user options to NOT install bloatware, because the default choice historically has been to install everything.You most likely wouldn't be able to use old and unsupported drivers anyway, so it's irrelevant what update-behavior Win10 has.
It even reinstalled the extra garbage like 3D Vision.
I really, *really* hope this changes on release day. I can understand forcing Windows security fixes but forcing driver updates is psychotic.
Bingo.I don't care too much if Microsoft wants to force windows patches but third party stuff needs to be left alone and up to the user.
It appears that automatic driver updates do not give the user options to NOT install bloatware, because the default choice historically has been to install everything.
Windows 10 is not compatible with RT.Can I use one of the isos floating around to update a surface pro 1 using windows rt 8.1?
Windows 10 is not compatible with RT.
Get the LTSB version of Enterprise if you want that level of control.Thanks. Are the softpedia links the best way to get the iso ahead of launch? I want to install on my desktop tonight and don't feel like waiting to the 29th or later.
-edit- hold up they force automatic driver updates? There is no way around this?
Get the LTSB version of Enterprise if you want that level of control.
Yeah the 3rd party forced updates is a massive turn off, it seems like such a stupid decision. I get they want it on so computer illiterates stay up to date but at least give us the option to turn it off, it's not like those people will ever find the option to disable it anyway.
So far there seems to be an option to turn driver updates off (which doesn't usually work) or try some scripts. I'm not upgrading until I hear something definitive.Wait this is news to me and a HUGE dealbreaker. Is there no way to turn it off?
Looks like the driver thing can be disabled per device if this hasn't changed:
http://windowsinstructed.com/disable-automatic-device-driver-download-in-windows-10/
What's the source that it doesn't usually work? I've seen people mention changing it but haven't read anyone saying they had forced driver updates after disabling them.So far there seems to be an option to turn driver updates off (which doesn't usually work) or try some scripts. I'm not upgrading until I hear something definitive.
What's the source that it doesn't usually work? I've seen people mention changing it but haven't read anyone saying they had forced driver updates after disabling them.
Welp, the Windows 10 preview just installed the latest Nvidia driver (353.54) even though I explicitly disabled driver updates through Windows Update.
There was no warning. I stepped away from my system for 20 minutes, came back to find the resolution switched to 1024x768 with Windows asking me to restart to complete the update. It even reinstalled the extra garbage like 3D Vision.
I really, *really* hope this changes on release day. I can understand forcing Windows security fixes but forcing driver updates is psychotic.
i looked at nvidia inspector after the update and noticed that CUDA is disabled too
clean installed this one from nvidia's site and it's still disabled though
edit - also, i had "never install driver updates automatically" set before running DDU and clean installing 353.30. when i turned "automatically install updates" back on, my secondary display disappeared and nvidia control panel was gone. restarted and was back at the driver that was downloaded through windows update (353.54), without seeing an installer or anything
Ouch, thanks.These guys
Windows 10 Pro users will have a little flexibility; they'll be able to switch from the mainstream release to the Current Branch for Business (CBB). This will give some control over when updates are deployed. While the CBB will essentially track the consumer release, it will allow feature updates to be held back for some amount of time; Anderson quotes a Microsoft executive saying that companies will have around eight months to prepare for each new feature update. Delay the feature update any further and they'll also be prevented from receiving security updates.
Only Windows 10 Enterprise users will be able to update in a way that resembles the current Windows 8 scheme. By opting for the Long Term Servicing (LTS) branch, Enterprise users will be able to defer feature updates for years, electing to receive only security fixes during that time. Microsoft is pushing most businesses to be on either the consumer release or, at worse, the Current Branch for Business, reserving LTS for mission critical systems that truly need this conservative approach.
I'm guessing most on GAF run Win 7 or Win 8 Pro, you're good:
The TL;DR of Windows 7/8 Pro to W10 Pro is:
Pro users will be able to control the flow of updates vs. Home users will simply be force fed updates.
I suppose the bigger unknown is what if 3rd party (graphics drivers for example) are tagged as being the "incorrect" version and get either: A) rolled back to a "windows approved" driver or B) replaced with a driver causing system stability. Either way, Pro users should be fine.
Link to quotes: http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/07/windows-10-updates-to-be-automatic-and-mandatory-for-home-users/
I'm guessing most on GAF run Win 7 or Win 8 Pro, you're good:
The TL;DR of Windows 7/8 Pro to W10 Pro is:
Pro users will be able to control the flow of updates vs. Home users will simply be force fed updates.
I suppose the bigger unknown is what if 3rd party (graphics drivers for example) are tagged as being the "incorrect" version and get either: A) rolled back to a "windows approved" driver or B) replaced with a driver causing system stability. Either way, Pro users should be fine.
Link to quotes: http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/07/windows-10-updates-to-be-automatic-and-mandatory-for-home-users/
What I'm hoping is happening is that Windows is recognising that the driver wasn't built for Windows 10 retail and grabbing the current driver. If that behaviour persists on future driver updates with the box checked, then it's pretty damn ridiculous.
This was my issue and why I was asking about it earlier. I've run Windows 7 64-bit home premium. It didn't have group policy functionality, for example, but was much cheaper. I didn't need the extra pro features to have a gaming and development home PC. I was hoping something similar would be available on the equivalent new version, rather than control actually being removed.
I'm not sure about the legality of buying pro keys but I guess some sites must be legitimate?
So in your case, Windows 7 Home Prem -> Windows 10 Home + $99 for Pro License ||| Upgrade W10 Home -> W10 ProBut, what if you want to move from the Home version to the Pro version?
With Windows 10 Microsoft is introducing the Windows 10 Pro Pack. The Pro Pack enables you to upgrade a Windows 10 Home system to Windows 10 Pro to take advantage of the increased features.
Available as a retail purchase online or in stores, the Windows 10 Pro Pack will cost $99.99.
Let's be honest, what this is driving towards is the importance of "signed" drivers. I would imagine this is the gateway to GPU updates being available through the Windows Store instead of a direct download. This may be best for the 3rd parties as well as the consumer since the Windows Store would know your model type and make driver updates "easier". Who knows though, really.
Paul T brought this up:
So in your case, Windows 7 Home Prem -> Windows 10 Home + $99 for Pro License ||| Upgrade W10 Home -> W10 Pro
Link: http://winsupersite.com/windows-10/how-upgrade-windows-10-home-windows-10-pro
Automatic driver updates? Guess I'll hold off upgrading after all, I only upgrade my nvidia driver once a quarter if that often, don't need windows downloading 250 meg drivers weekly for me.
This is not something that's going to go away.
You can turn off the updates for specific drivers, and rolling back any driver stops it(or should) from upgrading until you specifically manually upgrade it again.
That's another good option as well. It will be interesting to see how (if any) driver signing changes and if this is something MS changes due to labor pains from gamers.Most of that could be resolved by actually only installing the drivers and not the bloatware though. I play the latest games, so I usually have the latest driver, but I'm not having it install 3D vision. It keeps buggering things up.
Or, stick to 7/8 until the driver thing is possibly worked out and save $99.
I'm guessing most on GAF run Win 7 or Win 8 Pro, you're good:
The TL;DR of Windows 7/8 Pro to W10 Pro is:
Pro users will be able to control the flow of updates vs. Home users will simply be force fed updates.
I suppose the bigger unknown is what if 3rd party (graphics drivers for example) are tagged as being the "incorrect" version and get either: A) rolled back to a "windows approved" driver or B) replaced with a driver causing system stability. Either way, Pro users should be fine.
Link to quotes: http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/07/windows-10-updates-to-be-automatic-and-mandatory-for-home-users/
According to Guru3D forums it's a beta driver. Auto-update is even downloading unsigned drivers.My win10 auto updated my nvidia drivers today to a version not even listed on nvidias site (353.54).
Most people here I bet are running home premium. The mandatory video driver (3rd party) updates are insane. It should be enabled by default but with an option to disable. I'm sure an end user will come out with a registry edit or some script to kill this, but it's ridiculous we will even have to deal with that. I am not paying $99 to upgrade to pro just for the option to disable this.
My win10 auto updated my nvidia drivers today to a version not even listed on nvidias site (353.54). I found this out by coming back to the computer with my second monitor non-functioning and no access to nvidia control panel. Checking update history, sure enough it was pending a restart after installing the new video drivers. Already this situation is extremely unprofessional and confusing to a normal user. After restarting I'm getting strange random blue lines flickering in chrome, and my second monitor's window drag animation is stuttering. A poor decision by Microsoft that I'm hoping they'll reverse. I would also accept a seamless, practically invisible video driver update, but this would require a huge amount of coordination between nvidia and Microsoft and I doubt that will happen.
....and that's a problem. However--- I would bet money that is patched once the release version of W10 hits on the 29th.According to Guru3D forums it's a beta driver. Auto-update is even downloading unsigned drivers.
....and that's a problem. However--- I would bet money that is patched once the release version of W10 hits on the 29th.
Hopefully the mandatory 3rd party driver updates are patched as well.
Hopefully the mandatory 3rd party driver updates are patched as well.
Since I am in dire need of a format and Clean reinstall, can you do that with Win 10 when they release it? Or is it an upgrade installation to Win 8?
Since I am in dire need of a format and Clean reinstall, can you do that with Win 10 when they release it? Or is it an upgrade installation to Win 8?
Windows 10 feels underwhelming.
Mainly, it's an upgrade from Windows 8.1 that adds:
1. AI voice assistant Cortana
2. New Internet Browser called Edge
3. Start menu UI
There's another security improvement under the hood that's different from Windows 8.1.
Still though.
Not sure where the hype is.
Perhaps later when the updates cycle churn out like the Xbox One's is when the fun begins.
Read the user agreement.
Maybe drivers will change later, but no word on that yet.
Windows 7 feels underwhelming.
Mainly, it's an upgrade from Windows Vista that adds:
1. Pinning programs to the taskbar
2. Grouping icons on the task bar
3. Jump lists on the task bar
There's another security improvement under the hood that's different from Windows Vista.
Still though.
Not sure where the hype is.
Perhaps later when the updates cycle churn out like the Xbox 360's is when the fun begins.
4. "Metro" apps run in normal windows as they should have since the beginning, so they are actually useful on desktops and laptops beyond watching Netflix
5. No more hidden mouse gestures needed to fully use the OS
6. Notification center
7. DirectX 12, which brings console-style "coding to the metal" performance to PC
I think 4 is underestimated by a lot of people. There are some genuinely great Metro apps out there, and IMO they behave a lot better than traditional apps.
seems like Microsoft is pushing through anything that would have been in the optional category on previous windows updates which is not cool.
going to wait for someone to sneak in a google/yahoo toolbar with the forced updates and watch the world burn.
you upgrade to get the windows 10 key tied to your mircorsoft account. then you can use a usb/dvd without a key to do a completely clean install. you log back into the Microsoft account to reactivate.
I think the mandatory driver updates are only for the beta. It would make no sense to allow people to stick with old unsupported beta drivers in a beta version of Windows. BTW, the latest NVidia drivers fixed the distorted cursors and the flickering.
I don't get people who haven't even used 10 wanting to get rid of the metro apps. They work like normal apps now, no fullscreen bullshit, there's no reason to be hating other than yelling at clouds. Receiving a notification when you get an email or message without having to waste CPU and RAM keeping the email or messaging app running in background or a tab opened in my browser is fantastic.
The "they take too long to open" complaint is simply a matter of perception. Modern apps, when launched, open their windows instantly display a logo while loading the executable while Desktop apps need to load their executables first before being able to show a window. For example, if I launch Chrome it takes a couple seconds before it shows up, the only feedback my PC is doing anything is the HDD light blinking. Meanwhile Edge will open a window the instant I launch it and will take a couple seconds to show the UI.
4. "Metro" apps run in normal windows as they should have since the beginning, so they are actually useful on desktops and laptops beyond watching Netflix
5. No more hidden mouse gestures needed to fully use the OS
6. Notification center
7. DirectX 12, which brings console-style "coding to the metal" performance to PC
Just for fun, here's a Windows 7 version of your post:
I think the hatred of Windows 8 UI turned into irrational hatred of the very concept of Modern apps wholesale for some people. When they are demoted into normal windows like any other win32 app in Windows 10 instead of running "outside" the desktop in Windows 8, there's no clear reason to loath them.
1. There's no need to deal with download sites or second guess whether the download link Google gave you is the correct one.
2. Can be uninstalled by right clicking on them.
3. They cannot mess up your PC during install.
4. Can be installed without giving their installers admin rights. BTW, an installer is just a normal program like any other and it can do whatever the fuck it wants to your PC when you click "yes". Installers can contain bugs as well.
5. They won't come bundled with toolbars, adware and malware.
6. Won't leave leftover files, services and registry entries when uninstalled.
7. Updates are handled by the OS, so they won't install "update" services or schedules "update checks"
8. Apps like email clients, instant messengers and other communication apps can display notifications without the need to be running in the background and bloating your boot time.
Windows has been in dire need for a new application model for over a decade and with 10 I think they finally got themselves in the right track. Nowadays "freeware" on Windows has become a synonym for "toolbars, adware and malware bundled software". Desktops and laptops can definitely benefit for a mobile-like hassle free application management experience, specially when people are defecting en masse to phones and tablets as their primary computing platforms, where they don't need to worry about wrecking their devices by clicking the wrong link.
Just look at how popular Steam has become among PC gamers: one of its biggest strengths is often said to be how convenient it makes to download, install and update games compared to the "old ways".
Also, Windows 10 allows side-loading apps without the need for a developer account. It's just a toggle in the settings, like on Android.
I really hope the Windows 10 store takes off, so it can be finally viable to put my relatives into non-admin accounts.
Oh wow, suddenly Chrome won't start, so I go on to try Edge and I'm surprised at how fast it is. O_O
I'm really confused as to when users are supposed to be getting Windows 10?
I heard preview members will get it 29th, but I'm not a preview member. I reserved Windows 10 pretty much as soon as you could, so when should I expect it? Days or Months to wait?
Just pretty stupid. Why bother hyping 29th July if like 95% of people won't be able to get it anyway.