Batu69 Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 Maybe it’s my age, but I’ve found that I just don’t have the time or patience to play with Windows betas anymore. The bugs. The instabilities. The bricked PCs. I simply can’t get excited about once again playing guinea pig for Microsoft. In fact, aside from a minor dalliance with a "Redstone" pre-release build late last year, I have effectively sat-out the entire Anniversary Update testing cycle. I figured, "Windows 10 (RTM) was working great for me. Why muck it up by installing some buggy preview edition?" So, it was with a true consumer’s (as opposed to rabid tech enthusiast’s) perspective that I approached this week’s big Anniversary Update release. Once the ISO images became available, I used the Media Creation tool to download the 64-bit version. Then I started the upgrade cycle, answered a few questions about downloading updates and what I wanted to keep, and turned in for the night. The next morning, I was greeted with what appeared to be my normal lock-screen. However, when I tried to swipe it away to reveal the PIN code entry pad, the screen seemed to get stuck. It took me a few seconds to realize that the PIN pad was indeed visible, and that Microsoft had simply changed the lock screen behavior so that the underlying wallpaper remains while you enter your credentials. As to why it made this change, I haven’t a clue. It seemed superfluous and unnecessarily confusing to a user accustomed to the original Windows 10 lock screen. Regardless, the discovery of this unexpected new behavior set the tone of the rest of my experience. For example, it seems Microsoft’s engineers decided to shove the Action Center icon all the way to the right of the Task Bar (i.e. it "jumped over" the clock). Why? Who knows? But the shift has messed up my muscle memory -- I now have to consciously think of where the damned button is whenever I want to check on a notification or access a feature like Connect. Speaking of Connect, Microsoft moved the list of target devices. Now, when I try to connect my Dell Inspiron 13 7000 Series laptop to my Microsoft Display Adapter -- something I do almost every day to watch downloaded movies or TV content -- the adapter is listed below the descriptive text (it used to be above it). Also, the icon seems smaller and the text more washed out. Basically, it’s now harder to differentiate items in the target list from the surrounding text and chrome of the Action Center UI. Another annoyance: Toast bubbles are now "sticky". When I get prompted with a notification from certain apps, the corresponding Toast bubble seems to stay on screen until I either manually clear it (using its "x" button) or click the Action Center icon. On more than one occasion I had to close the bubble before I could interact with a button or control in an app that was "underneath" the Toast (e.g. the "Tweet" button in the Windows Store Twitter App). Very irritating. Of course, the biggest changes seem to have occurred within the Start menu. Gone is the nice, clean-looking layout with its drill-down All Apps list and clearly labeled system functions. Instead, I’m now presented with a word-salad of every App and legacy Win32 program in one long, scrollable list. Meanwhile, the system functions -- like Power and Settings -- have lost their labels. Why? Again, I haven’t a clue. And that’s the root of the problem. Windows 10 Anniversary Update is chock full of subtle tweaks and minute alterations -- a relocated icon here, a removed label there -- that feel entirely arbitrary. But while the changes may prove popular to a subset of Windows enthusiasts, it’s hard to put my finger on anything that the new version does better than the one it’s replacing. If anything, the jumbling of once-familiar interface elements has made me a less satisfied Windows user. And if someone like me -- a 30-year tech industry veteran who has beta tested every version of Windows since 3.0 -- finds these changes confusing, heaven help the average consumer who wakes up to find that "a bunch of Microsoft gremlins came calling in the night and moved all their stuff around". Article source Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pc71520 Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 1 Image = 1000 Words. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
freeforever03 Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 I had a similar experience with this update but with the added fun of having several programs destroyed. After the update, everything seemed fine until I rebooted. After the reboot, I got a missing dll error which turned out to be from my Samsung printer driver. I had to reinstall it. The next problem I had was that the "sidebar" was now missing. The old sidebar restore program no longer worked and I was getting errors. Fotunately, 8 Gadget Pack (posted here) worked perfectly. The next program to malfunction was Eraser and it had to be reinstalled as well. At this point, I have tested most the programs and they seem to work but I'm sure their are more issues lurking in the shadows. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nervin Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 that's why i remained to windows 7 Best Windows of all times Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A.lemane Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 34 minutes ago, nervin said: that's why i remained to windows 7 Best Windows of all times was now we r just wandering when the next one will be Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OldGeek44 Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 Now my Office 2013 says it needs to be activated! I did run OPA and have the data. I am going to see how it works out. My OPA data is from win 8.1 and Office 2013...I hope it all works out. My Win 10 1607 is still activated. If OPA does not work can I manually type in what I used to activate Office 2013? I thought OPA was just a tool to save you all the typing but I am not sure. Cover me, I'm going in! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sylence Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 Intel Ethernet network adapters are not signed Windows prevents them from installing if secure boot in on Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
straycat19 Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 1 hour ago, A.lemane said: was now we r just wandering when the next one will be IS And at the rate Microsoft is going I won't live long enough to see their next great OS because they are definitely headed in the opposite direction. And I wish all the Windows 10 users would quit their bitchin' because they are getting everything they asked for when they signed up for Microsoft's Perpetual Beta Program, commonly referred to as Windows 10. A lot of people are posting on tech forums that they want Microsoft to withdraw 1607 and revert their systems to 1511 because they are having so many software and hardware problems. If you can get a copy of LTSB that is the way to go. It isn't the best OS in the world but at least there isn't any crap in it and it has been fairly stable without a lot of problems so far. Just waiting for MIcrosoft to screw that up too. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skunk1966 Posted August 6, 2016 Share Posted August 6, 2016 Quote The old sidebar restore program no longer worked I had the same problem on my W10 testing laptop; uninstalled all gadgets and removed the sidebar x64 program files folder. After that I reinstalled the sidebar ( http://gadgetsrevived.com/download-sidebar/ ) and it's working again Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
A.lemane Posted August 21, 2016 Share Posted August 21, 2016 On 8/5/2016 at 5:33 PM, straycat19 said: IS And at the rate Microsoft is going I won't live long enough to see their next great OS because they are definitely headed in the opposite direction. And I wish all the Windows 10 users would quit their bitchin' because they are getting everything they asked for when they signed up for Microsoft's Perpetual Beta Program, commonly referred to as Windows 10. A lot of people are posting on tech forums that they want Microsoft to withdraw 1607 and revert their systems to 1511 because they are having so many software and hardware problems. If you can get a copy of LTSB that is the way to go. It isn't the best OS in the world but at least there isn't any crap in it and it has been fairly stable without a lot of problems so far. Just waiting for MIcrosoft to screw that up too. last time i installed it i didn't get the same 7 experience & some of my apps didn't work well with it windows update was a nightmare that never stops (errors loops EXTRA) .... so Honestly cant say that it is but definitely was with no doubt the one and obviously if MS dosnt create the big next thing people r going to start ditching windows at a rate more then the current . thats why there must be a next one ^^ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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