AES":3dt5vlu2 said:
In my wife's case, it was NOT an update (I presume you mean you updated from 8?) but a new load into a brand new PC.
Actually mine was the free update they offered, and from Win-7. That might be part of the issue, as 8 and 8.1 were buggy messes to begin with... I never got 8 for that exact reason, but on the whole 10 has been pretty good.
Often people make small mistakes when doing fresh installs, even professionals. Several friends are high end PC builders and I help them out as a hobby, but even they make silly little errors, forget to set X value in Y config, or just don't notice a particular nuance of certain hardware.
Most of the issues people have with Win10 turn out to be silly little mistakes, so it's just a case of finding them, really. One usually kicks one's self when one find the bloody thing!
AES":3dt5vlu2 said:
The reason, the "Dr." found out, was "data protection"!!!! Perhaps MS thinks she's got that Amazon thingy that talks to you? (She hasn't)!
Yeah, that's a big issue these days. A lot of the time it's a conflict between what Windows understands and what various antivirus software
thinks is a security issue. We do have a lot of problems at work, and the vast majority originate with the antivirus software we have.
AES":3dt5vlu2 said:
May not be "the latest and greatest" but they do what I need them to do, whereas as soon as you get to Win 10 " it's all been changed" and you have to (often) even BUY a new version.
That shouldn't necessarily be the case, as you can usually run older programs in 'Compatability Mode'. Just pick the right one, usually whatever OS version is last ran fine on, and it should be good. Anything that worked on older Windows should run on new, as MS is big on backwards compatability - A great many businesses would be stuffed, otherwise.
Buying new is either just a marketing drive from the third party software company, and/or a genuine security update requirement. It may not be immediately apparent, but older innocent software can sometimes be a gateway to accessing other more critical secure areas of the PC.
I'm actually not a big fan of upgrading and changing things, especially when I have to reapply all my changes and customisations, but sometimes it is needed.
AES":3dt5vlu2 said:
I've got tools that are well over 15 years old that work fine. Why can't I treat my software the same way?
Rather than a tool, think of it more like a locked room - One day someone devises a lock-picking device or a door-shim, so you have to replace that with a better one in order to keep your room secure.
AES":3dt5vlu2 said:
just trying to point out that just updating to today's "latest & greatest" (often without any thought it seems to me, just acceptance that it is "today's" version so MUST be better) may not suit everyone.
Oh, definitely - Sometimes it
is just a rip-off marketing drive to sell new stuff.
But sometimes it is for very good reasons, especially with things like software drivers or system bugs. Then it's more like when someone discovered that asbestos or thalidomide was harmful, and changes needed to be made rather sharpish.