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Ask Slashdot: Any Idiosyncrasies of the New Windows 10 April 2018 Update?

shanen wants to know if anyone else has noticed any idiosyncrasies of the new Windows 10 April 2018 update, which was released on April 30th (global rollout on May 8): Only two machines so far [are running the new version of Windows 10], but I already noticed a few peculiarities. Do you have any to share? Here are mine so far:

1. Microsoft prefers tightly linking the machine to a Microsoft account, for example via Outlook.com. If you have a machine that is not linked that way, the antivirus software will now attempt to force a link to a Microsoft account. And what is that new PIN supposed to be about?
2. Accessing a gateway on the wrong private network can produce a hard freeze, forcing a hard reset from the power down state. Possibly a serious security vulnerability to the point where I'm not sure I should share the details in public.

Anything you've noticed about the new Windows 10? (Now I have to get back to dealing with the new OS X update and the latest Ubuntu...)
Some of the new features include the ability to resume past activities in timeline, a file sharing feature with nearby devices, a rebuilt Game Bar with a new Fluent design UI, and a diagnostic data viewing tool in the Security and Privacy section. If you want to get the update before the global rollout, you can do so via Check for Updates under Windows Update.

4 of 149 comments (clear)

  1. New Drive Letter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Had a drive letter assigned to one of the system partitions and received notifications that the drive was almost out of space. I removed the drive letter using diskpart.

  2. Couple things typical of upgrading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First off my Dell notebook went flawless upgrading and surprisingly fast with SSD. Only noticeable issue was possibly Chrome browser hanging sometimes with some sites. My wife's HP notebook had a more significantly long upgrade taking over two hours to download and upgrade. But her's runs way more apps and has significantly more files besides having a slow (5400) spin drive. The other issue is of course the upgrade reverts some defaults back to Microsoft products. Like PDF viewer which I set to Chrome and it defaulted back to Edge. This is a typical and expected complaint of upgrading and it appears Microsoft has still not learned to respect the users choice of defaults. Otherwise I don't give a shit about any of the new features, or Edge or anything other then don't break the shit I use!

  3. Still can't detect incompatible hardware by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have a couple of older laptops and machines that are no longer supported by the drivers in Windows 10 automatic upgrades. Yet, they still try to apply themselves again. And again. And again; wasting gigabyte bandwidth and hours of time with each futile attempt.

    Thank {deity} for the Windows tool that allows you to selectively disable major "upgrades" like this.

  4. Re:Blue Screen While Upgrading by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No OS is perfect, it's true. But Linux has one thing going for it that neither Windows 10, iOS or Android have: it's not designed to put my ass under surveillance and rape my privacy behind my back.

    I'll take any OS designed with honesty in mind, however flawed, over an OS backed by big data any day of the week.

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash