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Latest Windows 10 Update Has Yet Another File-Managing Issue (gizmodo.com.au)

An anonymous reader quotes Gizmodo: When it was discovered earlier this month that the 1809 build of Windows 10 was deleting user files just because, Microsoft halted the update until the problem was fixed. Shame, then, that another not-as-bad-but-still-bad file overwriting bug has now reared its head. in 1809, overwriting files by extracting from an archive using File Explorer doesn't result in an overwrite prompt dialogue and also doesn't replace any files at all; it just fails silently. There are also some reports that it did overwrite items, but did so silently without asking.
Ars Technica speculates that there's a larger program with Microsoft's testing process: [M]any of the preview builds had a bug wherein deleting a directory that was synced to OneDrive crashed the machine. Not only was this bug integrated into the Windows code, it was allowed to ship to end users. This tells us some fundamental things about how Windows is being developed. Either tests do not exist at all for this code (and I've been told that yes, it's permitted to integrate code without tests, though I would hope this isn't the norm), or test failures are being regarded as acceptable, non-blocking issues, and developers are being allowed to integrate code that they know doesn't work properly...

Microsoft's new development process has, proportionately, a greater amount of time spent writing new features, and a reduced amount of time stabilizing and fixing those features. That would be fine if the quality of the features were higher to start with, with the testing infrastructure to support it and higher standards before new code was integrated. But the experience with Windows 10 thus far is that Microsoft hasn't developed the processes and systems needed to sustain this new approach.

4 of 177 comments (clear)

  1. kde - dolphin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    nuff said

  2. Just use LTSB by leathered · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you have to use Windows 10, use the LTSB version. No Windows Store, no Edge, no Cortana, no platform updates, security updates only with minimal telemetry.

    Microsoft don't want you to know about LTSB and do their best to hide its existence, but it's really what Windows 10 Pro should have been.

    --
    For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    1. Re:Just use LTSB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's also not capable of running Visual Studio 2017 while even Windows 7 can. No deal.

  3. Re:Guess I'm sticking with Win8.1 and classic shel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Windows 8.1 is not Windows 8! 8.1 is supported till January 2023.