skinny
- 21 Jan 2015 06:30
HARRYCAT
- 31 Jul 2015 10:26
- 154 of 638
Well I have bitten the bullet and signed up for the upgrade from 8.1 to 10.
If it makes Windows a bit less fussy, then it should be a good step forward.
skinny
- 31 Jul 2015 10:32
- 155 of 638
Harry - please post your experiences here - I'm thinking of doing it either this - or more likely next weekend.
HARRYCAT
- 31 Jul 2015 10:36
- 156 of 638
Will do. I have registered for the download, so Microsoft have slotted me into their queueing system.
skinny
- 31 Jul 2015 10:40
- 157 of 638
Make sure that you create Restore point before upgrading! :-)
Digger
- 31 Jul 2015 15:02
- 158 of 638
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-10/media-creation-tool-install?ocid=ms_wol_win10
If you do not want to wait use the link
Download was 30 mins update about 10 + a little fiddle with speakers /headphones 5mins
Easy to use no probs at the moment A friend took 10 hrs to download
skinny
- 02 Aug 2015 10:48
- 159 of 638
Thanks Digger - any obvious glitches so far?
ExecLine
- 02 Aug 2015 12:25
- 160 of 638
A few windows 10 upgrade thoughts and experiences:
Had a complete 'freeze-up' on the newly upgraded Vaio laptop. Every time I clicked on a tab on a chrome browser, which had about 8 tabs open in total, so as to open the browser window, that tab closed instead of opening. and then total freeze up.
I couldn't do a thing other than pull the plug (I don't use the battery) and go back to a previous Restore point.
The Vaio laptop has Vaio-Care installed as standard. I didn't know whether I should have uninstalled it before doing the W10 upgrade, but anyway rightly or wrongly, I just ignored it. It typifies the fact that there is a lack of upgrading info' out there at the moment.
I'm sure you know the kind of help you tend to get: eg. "It might be a good idea to take a back up of your Registry Folders," says one guru.
Hmmm? So how do you do that then? And where would you keep said backups? And what if you ever felt a need to use them for a Registry Folder Restore?
In other words, the info' is mostly for 'experts', written in 'expert language' and 'somewhat unthorough' and is also 'poorly explained'. Try doing something and disaster easily looms.
My two machines each had three W10 Update download failures and so I burnt an ISO version of Windows 10 onto a disk and did my upgrades with that.
I am very disappointed to have had to call it a day with Windows 10 and go back to Windows 7.
Windows 10 doesn't yet cater adequately for my own personal requirements of using Google's Chrome browser, upon which I now greatly rely, complete with the Adblock Plus, Ghostery and LastPass plug ins. In fact, you quickly read into things that 'Google and Chrome' is a deadly enemy of 'Windows 10 and its Edge browser'.
If you, say 'Import all your Chrome browser Favorites' into W10's Edge, then they also arrive in a 'very difficult to handle listed order'. With no 'plug ins' and no 'Favorites' and no browser 'History' either, I quickly became phenominally 'surfingly inconvenienced' too. The Windows 7 methodology, which I had carefully perfected over the last 3 years or so, all became instantly trashed.
One really needs to very thoroughly and carefully research exactly how one is to do everything and not just 'hope for the best' and 'hope to quickly re-learn new methodology'. There is simply far too much to have to research and learn to be able to do it all reasonably quickly.
It's possible, that whatever Microsoft planet the Windows 10 guys feel they live on, doesn't seem to closely ressemble the computing and Internetting one I inhabit and frequent.