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Microsoft Rolls Out Major Fall Update To Windows 10 (windows10update.com)

Ammalgam writes: Microsoft has rolled out a major update to Windows 10 called the Fall Update, November Update or Threshold 2. The update is now publicly available for everyone to download. Microsoft has confirmed it will be a staggered release. This update is full of fixes and refinements to Windows 10 including substantial changes to Edge, Cortana, icons, the Start Menu, Activation and multiple enterprise features. Here is a full list of changes. Have you updated your Windows 10 install yet? What was your experience?

9 of 181 comments (clear)

  1. I used the Media Creation Tool by ITRambo · · Score: 5, Informative

    I used the Media Creation Tool to get it right away. Download the tool, run it and select Upgrade Now. Went flawlessly on our two laptops. The upgrade did change our default PDF reader back to Edge, which I changed back to Foxit Reader. The options to add color to the title bar is off by default. You can click on Personalization and then Color to change the setting. White title bars suck. Mail client, which is improved, is now called Outlook when it's opened. That seems like an odd choice since Outlook is a full fledged desktop app. Never doubt the capability of Microsoft to confuse. The Media Creation Tool download link is: http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink...

    1. Re:I used the Media Creation Tool by klui · · Score: 3, Informative

      Or download the ISOs directly using https://www.microsoft.com/en-u...

  2. it's a recommended update now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hey Microsoft, I do not want it. Quit forcing it on me. I have recommended updates enabled because they contain fixes for windows usually that aren't security related.

    If you don't want it ever prompting you, download and run gwx control panel. Great program that completely removes windows 10 from ever being installed, removes the download of it if it is there, and even stops prompting you to install it.

    http://blog.ultimateoutsider.com/2015/08/using-gwx-stopper-to-permanently-remove.html

    This is what MS should have provided in the first place.

  3. Re:Best update ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Windows 10 requires SecureBoot, so you can't dual-boot Linux Mint with it.
    Since Microsoft made me choose between them, I updated to Linux.

    It does not require SecureBoot. Windows 10 is enough of a failure all on its own without the need to spread FUD.

    ** Posting anon so as to not undo moderation

  4. Re:Major Fail Update by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 2, Informative

    What exactly is a "proper windows"?

    Windows 10 is a nice upgrade from 7, it fixes a lot of 7's issues and brings forward many new technologies...

    8 was a mess, 8.1 less so, but still not all fixed. 10 fixed what was wrong with 8 and 8.1 and moved the whole thing forward, at least from my point of view.

  5. Technically true but completely wrong. by cbhacking · · Score: 4, Informative

    I take it you not only haven't used, but haven't even *seen* Win10?

    If your computer has an attached keyboard and you don't go well out of your way to do so, you will never see "Metro" in Win10. No full-screen Start, everything runs in a window, no Charms bar, no App Bar, etc. Windows Store apps (including the Store itself) now run in windows on the desktop. Title bars are visible at all times and can be dragged, edges can be dragged to resize, apps can be snapped with desktop apps, and so on.

    Now, if your computer is a tablet without an attached keyboard, then yes, the OS will default to "tablet mode" with the full-screen apps and so on. You can tell it not to do so, though; it's a simple setting (Settings -> System -> Tablet Mode). You can change the current mode, the default mode, and whether it automatically switches depending on the hardware configuration.

    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  6. Re:Took longer than expected by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Informative

    Same here. The really annoying part came after logging in and being greeted with what looked like a full screen ad to tell you the system had been updated, but was actually the installer continuing to run (which meant no end of hitting Escape, Space, Ctrl-Alt-Del, and so on until after two or three minutes it finally admitted the installer was still running.

    Thus far, on my test laptop, I can't really comment. Things look mostly the same, some minor style changes aside. CPU usage seems dramatically lower (it was pretty much permanently 99% previously on this old X-series Thinkpad with just Mail and Firefox open, now it's generally under 20%, but until I've used it for a few days I really don't want to assume this means they've fixed those problems.)

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  7. Re:Disable Telemtry by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 4, Informative

    Note that Disable Telemetry, at least on the non-business editions, doesn't actually disable telemetry, just some of it. To actually get rid of it all, open Task Scheduler, go to Microsoft > Windows > Application Experience and delete the AITAgent, Microsoft Compatibility Appraiser (that's for Win7/Win8), and ProgramDataUpdater tasks, and then in Customer Experience Improvement Program, delete all entries. That seems to take care of things at the moment but then keep an eye out for further spyware that'll be added in future critical Windows updates.

    There's also a list of several dozen phone-home domains you can block at your router floating around, but that only helps if you're sitting behind your own router that you've set up for blocking.

  8. Re:SHILLS MOD DOWN FACTS EH by cfalcon · · Score: 4, Informative

    You did not get modded down by shills. Shills rarely have accounts and very rarely have mod points.

    Your post was incorrect. You stated that "Windows 10 requires SecureBoot, so you can't dual-boot Linux Mint with it."

    Windows 10 requires SecureBoot. SecureBoot pre Windows 10, as part of the spec, required that you be able to disable it in the BIOS.
    The latest update removes this requirement.

    This is terrible news- but it does not mean that "you can't dual-boot Linux Mint". What it means is, any BIOS that offers SecureBoot- either the type you can set to "off" or the new type that pretty much literally just boots Windows- will be required.

    If you buy a motherboard with SecureBoot, you can check to see whether it will allow it to be turned off or not, and not purchase it. This means you can still dual boot to Mint.

    Now, obviously, this is a terrible policy on Microsoft's part, and it creates incentives for Microsoft to favor in some way manufacturers that make BIOSes that don't boot Linux. This is a worthy cause to rant about, and Microsoft is clearly trying to close ground with Oracle for Most Evilist Fuckers In Tech.

    But your post was modded down because it made an incorrect assertion- that Windows 10 can't dual boot with Linux. It can.

    And check my post history if you think I'm a shill. If I am, wow am I playing the long con.