South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
In regards to update downloads, set your connection to metered, also works for ethernet.
If you don't like Windows, move to a Linux OS, not sure what's stopping you.
Very little actually is stopping me, if you can tell me what wireless usb modem i can go and purchase that will work out of the box with linux i will install Linux right now, currently i have a WN722N and tried a WN823N v2 wireless adapter on linux and it did not work, Linux does see the internet connection, i can connect to my router fine, but somehow id does not know how to communicate/work with the device as it does not connect to the internet at all. I have in detail produced my problem and all the errors i got and have gotten many solutions by the helpfull linux guys on another forum but still did not solve my problem.
No fooling, 6minutes indeed. You come to my house and i show you in realtime..
No fooling, 6minutes indeed. You come to my house and i show you in realtime..
I am going to give the very short story, get this, you cannot simply do a peer to peer connection nor can you simply do a lan connection, and YES i went through countless of pages of research and used many troubleshooting methods myself to NO avail. So many people having endless problems it makes one sick just to read half of it
When i finally got the dumb homegroup option to work, only to find that it goes into a never ending connection spree once entering the stupid password, Never actually connecting the pc's
When i do that it displays a continious message "identifying" on both pc's its all it does for eternity.
I got so far as to manually configure the ip adresses on both pc's, (not that it was needed because both network cards did display that it obtained valid ip adresses, and on both pc's windows identifies the network cards respectively 100% and they are working perfectly as i made connections before on earlier operating systems sucessfuly between 2 pc's, both is set to WORKGROUP and am on the same subnet. but on win 10 i only get "identifying" when the cable is plugged into both pc's
The network cards is the built in type into motherboard, the one pc is an asus motherboard from 2011, and the other pc is a asrock mortherboard from 2016.
...
I then plugged one pc into the wireless router, and the pc's was able to see each other but could not connect to each other.
I did come right with an adhoc connection, can someone tell me if there is a way to boost the power to a thumbdrive wireless usb adapter so i can stick it onto a usb extension cable of 5 meters, so that i can position the wireles adapter in such a way to get a more direct straight line to the other pc, that should work but the small usb wireless adapter does not respond on a usb cable extension, and the WL722 usb adapters that does work on an extended cable is nowhere to be sold in my town.
O please how old are you 12 ? Not for you to judge what my skills are, i did my MCSE back in the day, and worked in the industry for 6 years, i worked for 3 big IT companies and YES i can give you the references to contact to find out for YOURSELF how well i provided my services, anytime pal just ask menot that i need to prove anything to YOU whoever YOU are, but i will GLADLY give you the contact numbers.
Understand that there are many IT people that cannot solve every single problem, let me tell you it is impossible, even for YOU, so don't come here and try and be a clown..in getting something to work sometimes the solution is something no one thought about, Look at my problem for instance, Not a single working solution from anyone yet as to what EXACTLY my problem is....So almighty IT GRANDMASTER if YOU are so good, What is YOUR solution ??????? But If you are here to troll about rather let someone with a solution reply as i am not interested in your meaningless discussion.
- Devastating Windows rot (might be solved in future Windows releases if developers switch from Win32 to UWP).
- No enforced file system and registry hierarchy (I have yet to find a single serious application which can uninstall itself cleanly and fully). The $USER directory in Windows, specially in Windows 10, is an inexplicable mess.
- svchost.exe (the whole philosophy of preserving RAM this way became outdated years ago).
- No true safe mode (rogue applications may easily run in it).
- No clean state (for most OEM installations out there). This will be finally solved in new Windows 10 builds.
- The user as a system administrator (thus viruses/malware - most users don't and won't understand UAC warnings).
- No good packaging mechanism (MSI is way too fragile).
- No system-wide update mechanism (which includes third party software - to be fair there are third party applications which offer this functionality, but then such applications don't support core Windows updates).
- In certain cases it's extremely difficult to find or update drivers for your hardware devices (anyone who's tried to install a fresh Windows onto their laptop will testify).
- Windows is extremely difficult to debug (e.g. try finding out why your system is slow to boot).
- Windows boot problems are too often fatal and unsolvable unless you reinstall from scratch.
- Windows is hardware dependent (especially when running from UEFI).
- Windows updates are terribly unreliable, very slow (to install) and they also waste disk space. The only released Windows 7 SP1 cumulative update, totally breaks the Windows Updates service (the worst piece of software in human history).
- Windows cannot replace system DLLs on the fly and restart corresponding services which depend on said DLLs due to its architecture. As a result some system updates require multiple reboots (innocuous malevolence in me requires to mention that in Linux you can even update the kernel on the fly).
- Windows keeps trying to reinstall failed updates over and over (in certain cases every such cycle of "updating" can render your PC disabled for hours!).
- There's no way to cleanly upgrade your system (there will be thousands of leftovers), etc.
- The Windows OS installer doesn't give a damn about other OSes installed on your PC and it always overwrites the MBR. In case of already existing Windows installations, it sets the newly installed Windows as the default OS - no questions asked. In case of UEFI, booting of other non-Windows OSes is unsupported and Windows actively prevents this.
- WinSxS, though a neat idea, turned into some madness: Windows keeps the versions of files the user won't ever need: for instance the English version of Windows will have copies of files for many other languages irrespectively of the chosen locale or MUI.
- Most malware writers target Windows as the most popular desktop OS, so it has the biggest number of viruses among all other OSes (over five thousand new viruses daily).
- Windows loves thrashing your HDD.
- Microsoft programmers are still unable to cope with NTFS fragmentation twenty-five years after its introduction. To make things worse most Windows applications do not preallocate files thus they contribute to fragmentation even more.
- Windows anti-virus products oftentimes make your PC less safe - so if you want perfect security and privacy, stop using Windows and migrate to Linux right away. OEM updaters make your PC wide open for attacks.
- Microsoft has recently decided that you will no longer be able to download certain Windows updates manually. You'll only be able to get them via Windows Update.
- "sfc /scannow" is offered as a solution to most Windows Update Service and Microsoft Installer Service errors, yet in 95% of cases it's totally ineffective.
- Windows does not allow you to use any partitions other than the first one on your removable USB flash drive. There's no logic or explanation behind this totally ridiculous and artificial limitation.
- Windows does not automatically clean temporary files ever, however it must do that for every reboot/power cycle.
- The generic drivers Windows comes with are not always compatible with the wide range of existing hardware. Since Windows has a habit of replacing your vendor's drivers with its own newer drivers your hardware may stop working correctly after upgrading to a newer Windows release
- Microsoft has gone crazy: Windows 10 is now a recommended update for all Windows 7/8.1 users unless you're running their Enterprise versions. That means your computer will automatically update to Windows 10 unless you either disable the Windows Update service completely or set Windows updates to the manual mode.
- In May 2016 Microsoft started deceptively updating users' PCs to Windows 10 regardless of your Automatic Windows Updates settings or the way you interact with the GWX application.
Afaik you need to use a crossover ethernet cable on some older NICs.
In April 2017 Microsoft published a list of things it's collecting from your PC at the basic telemetry setting (Web Archive copy).
Wow, just wow: Microsoft now openly publishes its collected data in regard to Windows 10 users:
"Over 44.5 billion minutes spent in Microsoft Edge across Windows 10 devices in just the last month" - we spy on Edge users.
"Over 82 billion photos viewed within the Windows 10 Photo app" - you're using our Gallery app, right? Great!
"Gaming continues to grow on Windows 10 – in 2015, gamers spent over 4 billion hours playing PC games on Windows 10" - we now know what apps you're running and for how long.
Starting October 2016 telemetry (spying) became impossible to disable in Windows 7 and 8.1 because Microsoft changed the way it distributes updates for those two operating systems.
Windows 10 Enterprise, which is the only version where ostensibly telemetery can be fully disabled, is still contacting various data collection servers despite your privacy settings.
Microsoft's EULA grants Microsoft the rights to use any of your content related to the services like Bing, Cortana (a built-in file indexer and search in Windows 10), OneDrive or Skype: "you grant to Microsoft a worldwide and royalty-free intellectual property license to use Your Content". You can read Microsoft's response here which paints everything in a positive light however after Snowden's leaks it's hard if not impossible to take them seriously.
Microsoft pushes Windows 10 so hard it actually started spreading FUD even about its own older OSes:
Microsoft started lying through their teeth about Windows 7: "We do worry when people are running an operating system that's 10 years old that the next printer they buy isn't going to work well, or they buy a new game, they buy Fallout 4, a very popular game, and it doesn't work on a bunch of older machines. And so, as we are pushing our software vendors and hardware partners to build great new stuff that takes advantage of Windows 10 that obviously makes the old stuff really bad and not to mention viruses and security problems".
Egregious lying continues: Microsoft falsely states that newer Intel and AMD CPUs will only be supported by Windows 10. If that were actually true you wouldn't be able to run MS-DOS on Intel Skylake yet you can, perfectly (edit: later, Microsoft reneged on not supporting Skylake CPUs). Perhaps they are talking about new advanced features of the said CPUs, but their wording means the opposite: like you cannot physically run any older Windows releases on these new CPUs.
Microsoft is getting desperate: the users of Intel Kaby Lake CPUs and AMD Ryzen CPUs will no longer receive Windows 7/8.1 updates at all. More information.
Microsoft has lost its mind and they now aggressively try to foist/force Windows 10 on unsuspecting users. Oh, it's now official: they will forcefully install it everywhere they can in 2016.
- Windows 10 will forever be beta software (specially after they fired a large chunk of their QA/QC department and instead delegated testing to the insiders):
- A new model of development with no Windows 11 in sight.
- Two Control Panels (read below).
.
- You've got no real control over crucial features of the OS:
- Windows 10 will have no service packs which means it will always be a work in progress and you are a perpetual beta tester.
- Forced updates you cannot opt out of (and Microsoft have borked quite a lot of them recently so prepare to see your Windows die after installing a new batch of updates - actually Microsoft has already borked one update, read horror stories about KB3081424). In December 2016 Chris Capossela, chief marketing officer at Microsoft, admitted that the company had gone too far with the way Windows updates are distributed.
- Safe Mode has become impossible to access unless you've booted into ... the running OS, which totally defeats its purpose. Also Safe Mode is hidden behind almost a dozen of steps vs. a single F8 key press on boot in every Windows version from 95 to 7.
- Windows 10 anniversary update makes it very difficult (read impossible for average users) to disable Cortana.
- Windows 10 violates basic networking principles: it ignores the hosts files, the DNS protocol and firewall rules and sends telemetry data regardless
Microsoft says that there will be at least two service updates (or whatever their names are) for Windows every year, and each update is basically a new version of Windows, so:
- Twice per year you may reinstall software deemed not required by Microsoft.
- Some features you grew dependent on will be removed without providing any alternatives.
- Your preferences will be reset to default, so you'll need to go through them regularly.
- Some Metro applications will be reinstalled if you deleted them previously. New wonderful Metro applications will be installed.
- Expect your group policy settings and tweaks to be completely removed or changed and the only way to get them back is to upgrade to Windows 10 Enterprise.
- Certain software titles and drivers will cease to work.
- Two kinds of font antialiasing (ClearType v2 for classic applications and some awful dirty grayish something for Modern apps).
- All kinds of varying visual decorations and styles (some people have discovered up to seven varying styles in Windows 10).
- Absolutely dissimilar classic and modern (PC settings) control panels.
- Different font faces and sizes all around.
- Different styles of settings for modern apps.
- Absolutely different context menus and their appearance in different applications and apps.
- Terrible hardly-configurable appearance, dubious design choices and extremely limited functionality (vs Windows 7/XP):
- Two Control Panels with absolutely zero thought given to how they differ and why each one should be used.
- Some Control Widgets are spread between the two Control Panels which is utterly confusing (e.g. User Management).
- No Windows classic UI for windows decorations. Windows decorations can hardly be configured at all in Windows 10.
- An awful choice of colors/palette
- Absolutely awful, childish and amateurish icons (the current release features slightly better icons) as if we live in the era of eight-bit displays (only rivalled by those in Windows 3.1 from 1992). Windows 2000 in 1999 looked better than Windows 10 in 2015.
- A big number of Windows 10 apps are still NOT on par with their classical counterparts from Windows 7/Vista/XP (many features are missing or many options are not configurable).
- It features huge mandatory system and apps updates (you cannot disable them, you can only postpone the system reboot after their installation).
- As if it wasn't enough, Windows 10 gets downloaded automatically if you run Windows 7 or 8.1. We are talking about 3-6 gigabytes of data some people absolutely do not need.
- It uses your free bandwidth to distribute updates to other users nearby you.
- Windows 10 Pro edition has become more or less unsuitable for small enterprises because Windows 10 anniversary update removes the ability to disable the following "features" (more like annoyances)
Visual Studio 2015 C++ compiler secretly inserts telemetry code into binaries.
Steve Carrol said:hi everyone. This is Steve Carroll, the dev manager for the Visual C++ team.
Tl;dr: thanks folks for the feedback. Our team will be removing this from our static libs in Update 3.
Our intent was benign – our desire was to build a framework that will help investigate performance problems and improve the quality of our optimizer should we get any reports of slowdowns or endemic perf problems in the field.
We apologize for raising the suspicion levels even further by not including the CRT source, this was just an oversight on our part. Despite that, some of you already investigated how this mechanism works in nice detail. As you have already called out, what the code does is trigger an ETW event which, when it’s turned on, will emit timestamps and module loads events. The event data can only be interpreted if a customer gives us symbol information (i.e. PDBs) so this data is only applicable to customers that are actively seeking help from us and are willing to share these PDBs as part of their investigation. We haven’t actually gone through this full exercise with any customers to date though, and we are so far relying on our established approaches to investigate and address potential problems instead.
We plan to remove these events in Update 3. In the meantime, to remove this dependency in Update 2, you should add notelemetry.obj to your linker command line. If you’re generally concerned about phone-home scenarios, more information about how to configuring Windows 10 appropriately to your needs can be found here: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us...top-data-flow-to-microsoft#bkmk-priv-feedback
Thanks.
- Windows 10 anniversary update blocks all drivers which are not signed by Microsoft. At the moment the ext2fsd driver and VirtualBox will cease to function.
- In Windows 10 certain not-so-old games and applications either do not work or have severe problems.
- Windows 10 shows full-screen ads on your lock screen.
- March 2017 update: Windows Explorer now shows ads for OneDrive.
- A new shocker: Windows 10 installs apps behind your back without your approval. The first Windows anniversary update without asking first reinstalls Skype and auto-logins you.
- As has already been mentioned, different Windows 10 releases are different operating systems altogether, so Microsoft is "free" to deprecate the support for your hardware even if it came with Windows 10 preinstalled. So, Microsoft decided it no longer wants to allow new Windows releases on PCs having an Intel Clover Trail Atom CPU inside.
6 minute startup???
Wtf
I'm no windows fan but my windows 10 boxen start in seconds
The biggest problem with windows is between the keyboard and chair.
o man you barn stormed this one, though i can counter many of the replies, i just don't have it in me right now, had a bad week. so many things in winblows can be done differently and much more efficiently... anyway cheers for your thoroughness and eagerness to reply on every point, have a good one.