Windows 10 Will No Longer Auto Install Feature Updates Twice a Year (windowscentral.com)
Microsoft has announced that starting with the Windows 10 May 2019 Update, which will hit general availability late next month, users will no longer be forced to install new Windows 10 feature updates as they become available. From a report: This comes after feedback from users who have had countless issues with updates breaking programs, losing files, and installing at inconvenient times. Microsoft has been working hard to improve Windows Update, and while the system is better than it was at launch in 2015, it's still not perfect. Now, users will have the option to not have to deal with feature updates when they are released.
What Microsoft is doing here is splitting Windows Update in two. The normal "check for updates" button will now only function for security and monthly patches. Feature updates now get their own area in Windows Update where the user can initiate the download and install process for the latest feature update available. If the user doesn't want to initiate that process, they don't have to. The user will be alerted that a new feature update is available every now and then, but at no point will the user be forced to install that update, as long as the version of Windows 10 they're currently running is still in support.
What Microsoft is doing here is splitting Windows Update in two. The normal "check for updates" button will now only function for security and monthly patches. Feature updates now get their own area in Windows Update where the user can initiate the download and install process for the latest feature update available. If the user doesn't want to initiate that process, they don't have to. The user will be alerted that a new feature update is available every now and then, but at no point will the user be forced to install that update, as long as the version of Windows 10 they're currently running is still in support.
So they'll more quickly remove support for older versions to force updates?
It seems like it’s been a cat and mouse game with MS on Windows. MS has been trying to force “features” on their customers while the customers have been pushing back that they didn’t want these features especially since it seemed they were beta-testing them for MS.
Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
Dunno but I kind of theorize that they had some sort of massive talent exodus circa 2005. EVERY product since then has been a half-assed unnecessary recreation of a previous reasonably hardened product. And every one of the new products seems to get abandoned before being fully completed, in favor of more rewrites.
Windows 2000 (to some extent XP) and Office 2003 were badass, and did everything their modern counterparts do on comparably minuscule amounts of RAM and CPU.
Vista was so-so, 7 kinda stabilized it, but it still ran worse than 2000. Then they threw that shell out for 8, kinda fixed it in 8.1, then threw that out for 10... Office got revamped with '07 (badly) and then messed with again in 2012. And the weirdest thing is that none of the rewrites goes all the way - there's always some remnant of the old product if you dig - take Windows control panels for example: 10 has those stupid material-design-looking ones, but they only implement maybe 15% of the control panel - once you run out of them you get dumped back in the Windows 7 control panel. But that only implemented maybe 85% of the control panel, and when you run out of those you get dumped back into the 2000 control panels (which were reasonably complete).
Don't get me started on the new Win10 Calculator, which has a noticable startup time and looks like shit, or the Windows Photo Viewer which takes longer and longer to open a JPG with every release, and is currently around 8 seconds on my machine for a 24MP file (meanwhile Irfanview opens almost anything instantly). And Windows Photo Viewer has next to no functionality!
And they threw Windows Mobile under the bus and let Apple take over the cellphone market, before releasing a me-too Windows Phone (making most people's perception that they were late to the smartphone game rather than one of its innovators). Now even that is circling the drain.
I think maybe the xbox 360 was designed before this happened, because that was fairly solid. Can't say the same for the One though.
I'm almost done with them. If I can every get Adobe Creative Suite for Linux I think I'd drop them and never look back.