Broken Windows 10 Update Causes Reboot Loops For Some Users 203
An anonymous reader writes: The Guardian reports that some early adopters of Windows 10 are finding their computers stuck in a reboot loop after installing a particular update. KB3081424 is a cumulative update, packaging together a group of smaller ones for ease of installation. For some users, the update continually fails to finish installing before issuing a reboot command to the PC. "It downloads, reboot to install. Gets to 30% and reboots. Gets to 59% and reboots. Gets to 59% again and then states something went wrong so uninstalling the update. Wait a few minutes and reboot. Back to login screen," said Microsoft forum user BrettDM. "This happens without fail, every single time."
No problems here (Score:5, Funny)
What reboo..........
The biggest problem with windows (Score:2, Interesting)
Is that it reboots all the time, and you can't stop it, only delay it (and if you're not on your computer 24/7, eventually you'll miss the delay prompt and it will just reboot). I'm obsessive with saving (if there's one thing Windows has taught me, it's to hit control+s after every sentence in a document or email) so I haven't lost work, but countless coworkers have. Yet, they still always have excuses when I offer to install Linux on their computers.
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Yet, they still always have excuses when I offer to install Linux on their computers.
Could it be because Linux has even more weird breakage.
Re: The biggest problem with windows (Score:2, Insightful)
Some of the reasons are valid, like one of my coworkers who I know writes music and needs specific music software only for windows (maybe Mac too). But most cases, it's bogus reasoning like the kind Microsoft spreads, laziness, being afraid of something new, outdated fears that Linux requires the command line, etc. I've never heard them mention anything about Linux breakage, but maybe that's because they won't even say that when their excuse is something stupid like "Linux is free? It can't be good."
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I would love to have this wonderful experience of Linux desktop computing I read about on the internet. Trouble is it doesn't matter how often I go back to it or what distribution I try I always find it to be impossibly buggy. Google how to fix these problems and you're soon into the bowels of the system messing around with incomprehensible configuration files. I do often wonder if I'm just the unluckiest person ever to try Linux or Linux users are in denial about the problems with their operating systems.
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Wrong. I've installed Linux on new, pre-built computers without doing any compatibility checks and It Just Worked. This holds both for desktops and laptops. I've never had Linux fail to install or not work properly. Depending on the hardware and the distro, I sometimes have to install binary-blob graphics drivers to get the best performance, but the system is fully operational, w
Re: The biggest problem with windows (Score:4, Insightful)
does suspend sedation "Just Work"? does two-finger tap for right-click "Just Work"? does wi-fi roaming "Just Work"?
oh i know. it's open source... i should just STFU and fix it myself, right?
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XP had a similar setting, but sometimes it used to ignore it.
No problems for me (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No problems for me (Score:4)
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Re:No problems for me (Score:5, Insightful)
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The problem here is mandatory updates and inexperienced users. So what you are basically saying is screw you some inexperienced users, you can pay a professional more than the cost of the operating system to fix a problem caused by a failure in the updating of that operating system. Your response is akin to screw you jack it works fine for me. The general slashdot response is hold on a second there partner if you are going to do compulsory upgrades, then you had better make sure they work 100% of the time,
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Inexperienced users wouldn't know to skip a bad update. Inexperienced users wouldn't know how to install a critical update. Inexperienced users are screwed no matter what. If they're going to get screwed they might as well get screwed by maybe being .1% of users who get bricked vs the 50% of users who end up as a bot farm.
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So it would seem to me you agree that inexperienced users who experience a failed compulsory upgrade are screwed as a result of M$'s actions and as such M$ should pay the cost for fixing any failures that result from a poorly executed compulsory upgrade, not the inexperienced users choice or actions, hmm, class action law suit time ;).
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Nah, I expect them to take the time to learn to fix their computers. This is 2015, it is about time to learn how to drive even if you're really very good at snapping the buggy whip. Google is close and even Bing will lend a helping hand.
Because it brings nothing to the conversation (Score:2)
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learn to ignore the wackjobs
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I think the issue is that comments can be filled up w/anecdotes that, if anything, are more appropriate for a poll.
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If you're too fucking special to write out "with" properly, then at least try to avoid running it into the following word.
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I have 10 on none of my computers, but 7 on one, and the Windows Updates today took that one out convincingly as well, requiring an hour of hassle to get back to a working system again.
But at least I could choose not to retry the same failed security updates as soon as I was up and running again before I've had chance to investigate what went wrong or Microsoft have chance to issue a fix for their fix.
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It'd be real nice if Microsoft paid more attention to isolating software components from the core OS.
I thought that's what the HAL (Hardware Abstraction Layer), part of NT/XP/Vista/Windows 7-10 since I don't know when, was for.
I also thought that NT (like NextStep) was designed to be hardware-agnostic from the ground up. Heck, there was even an (unreleased?) version of NT for PowerPC (and I think they had it running on PowerMac 6100s, too).
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NT was designed to be hardware agnostic with just needing an updated HAL to be ported to another architecture and there has been NT ports for a few architectures. The problem is that MS started moving parts of Windows into kernel space, eg the video driver with NT4 for speed. I'm not sure what the current status is but every time someone talks about bluescreens (or the reboot that replaced it), someone else claims it's hardware or hardware drivers so some stuff must be in kernel space. Really it would take
Re:No problems for me (Score:4)
Unfortunately, the other major desktop operating systems are almost as bad, just maybe in slightly different ways. Typical Linux distros provide no security or robustness at all when it comes to installing/upgrading/uninstalling anything that isn't part of the distro itself -- they can drop their junk anywhere, and many packages do -- and upgrading your distro is a brave thing to do on any system you rely on. OS X has similar problems. As long as these *nix systems are still based on the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard and traditional user/group/others access control model, and as long as programs can dump their executables and configuration and documents wherever they feel like, and as long as those programs can freely access each other's data, all these platforms will be limited in how much they can improve on today's standards.
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Thalidomide worked for some users. Some gave and arm and leg for it.
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Thalidomide work great for almost all users. The unborn fetuses of the users were what was affected.
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Could we write a new Slashdot headline? "Windows 10 patch works for some users. Some users have issues."
That's how I read the headline as it currently exists. You're trying to point out a problem that isn't there.
Re:No problems for me (Score:5, Informative)
It's probably because they fixed it between the Guardian reporting it and Slashdot finally getting around to posting about it.
http://www.techradar.com/news/... [techradar.com]
KB3033929 (Score:3)
This is hardly the first time such phenomena has occurred.
KB3033929 would kindly patch, fail, backout, and repeat for any users arrogant enough to overwrite the bootloader for multiple operating systems.
I disabled automatic update, which is a luxury that I would have to forego on the dark day that I upgrade to Windows 10.
That day will be a long time coming.
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Open source Microsoft bootloader? (Score:4, Insightful)
If Microsoft believes that they have a more compelling product than GRUB that should be adopted by competing operating systems, then they should open-source it.
Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:5, Informative)
No update cycle is perfect. Problems happen. But being unable to refuse an update, or roll it back, etc., is a recipe for problems galore.
You can do all of those things [4sysops.com], although the means are extremely non-obvious.
Re:Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Actually they disabled the registry tweak in RTM, but you can either disable the service or use the group policy editor to restore the option to prompt you before updates, and the tool which hides driver updates can actually be used to hide any windows update.
I think it's a bit shameful that you have to do anything but click a couple of times to make the system prompt you before installing updates. I want to review them every time, and that should be the default. People should be encouraged to actually read
Re:Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:5, Interesting)
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There are still some updates where the knowledge base article doesn't have very much detail but for many updates it will give a nice overview of what actually changed and why.
Re:Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:4, Informative)
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This is one of the things that tightens my jaws on software updates in general - I'm sick and tired of seeing that a new version of an app is available, and the sole contents of what the update changes is "bug fixes."
May as well not have written anything at all.
Re:Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sick and tired of seeing that a new version of an app is available, and the sole contents of what the update changes is "bug fixes."
Well if they were honest and said "Fixed more edge cases where ads weren't displaying" or "Increased the frequency of GPS coordinate tracking," nobody would install the update...
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It's almost useless. The summary tells you whether it's a bug fix, new feature, etc. It doesn't tell you anything about it, so that function would be better served by a column in the list view, but it's not actually useless information.
Re:Forced Updates-- What could POSSIBLY go wrong? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is more about making life easier for Microsoft than it is about giving a damn about users.
When I forcibly uninstalled the update to Windows 8.1 which started pushing Windows 10 at me, one of the things it said it was doing was adding a piece to monitor and evaluate how well system updates are going. Basically gather metrics on how bad they're doing.
Microsoft has decided that it's their computer, that if they feel an update needs to be applied they will, and that if it breaks for some users that's an unfortunate side effect of having your customers doing your beta testing ... but thanks for doing our beta testing.
The trend with computers and electronic devices is for the license to say "you don't own this, and you don't get a say in what we do to it". And people are going to start pushing back when they suddenly find themselves with a broken computer because Microsoft forced an update on them.
Microsoft isn't going to pay to fix it, they're not going to pay for the loss of productivity. They're simply going to say "bummer", and keep doing it.
Which if you or I did that we'd be charged criminally under the computer fraud and abuse act or something similar.
But they have an EULA which says they're allowed to.
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actually, Microsoft have made hardware. They made the ergonomic keyboard, and they made the wheel mouse. That's just for starters.
There is also: ...
XBox (and the signature Big Ben controller)
Hololens
Webcams
Headsets
Sidewinder game controllers
Kinect
Cordless land phones
Surface Hub
Zune MP
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I still have a functioning PS/2 3-button wheel mouse (the first and last one I ever bought) that's been in daily use since the day I bought it back in 1998, it's the one with the ball not the optical one - oldskool for the win! I'm after a case of split curve keyboards (like the Ergonomic 4000 but without the wheel - that while useful, I think would get in my way to be honest, and I've a feeling the 4000 doesn't use microswitches, opting instead for a membrane). I can't remember what the model number was on
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Exactly this. I never install an update the day it comes out because of these issues. It's better to wait it out a bit, let the bugs to the patch that was supposed to fix other bugs, get patched. Now people don't have that option and well... expect some very angry customers and business owners to reach out to you in disgust. GREAT way to build trust with your user base! WOOHOO!
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Give it time, give it a few thousands of users going berserk over them not being able to use their computers sensibly and MS will change that.
Why do you think I haven't installed Win10 yet? It takes time for a corporation to find out that their latest way to screw over the users gets them angry and they backpedal. Give it time. Then you'll most likely get a very usable system once the bad and the ugly that they wanted to screw us over with had to be removed.
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"The wise thing for Microsoft would be to establish four basic categories of update: Security, Important, Optional, and Driver. "
Why the hell would that make a difference? Microsoft marks things as Important based on whether they WANT you to have it, not so much on whether it's actually important that you have it. You know, like their update for adding nagware to upgrade to Windows 10.
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Win8 did exactly this, broke all systems that had GRUB installed.
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BIOS Update (Score:2, Informative)
Had this happen when installing. Probably the same issue - Turned out I had to update the BIOS so that the Intel CPU was trusted. Now everything is smoove.
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Also on Windows 7 - Anyone else having issues? (Score:3)
I have had an unusual amount of issues with windows updates this year.
Re:Also on Windows 7 - Anyone else having issues? (Score:4)
There have been any number of problems on Windows 7 in the last couple of months. In particular, KB3035583 (the update that pushes out the "upgrade to Windows 10" button and background-installer) has been causing a lot of issues for some users. In some cases, it's leading to Windows Update and the associated services going crazy in terms of CPU load and HDD access for 30+ minutes after booting. In other cases, it's even being linked to corrupted system files.
That's the most serious one I'm aware of at the moment, but there have been a good number of other horrors since the start of 2015, inflicting anything from infinite-reboot-loops to corrupted video playback on users unlucky enough to have the wrong hardware/software combinations.
MS's update testing seems to have gone to hell lately. In many respects, I am quite tempted by the free update to Win 10 Pro I'm eligible for, but the mandatory updates thing (even if Pro lets you defer them for a while) is putting me off. The fact that they stagger how long you can put off the upgrade based on whether you are Enterprise, Pro, Home or "amnesty" (the less favoured you are, the shorter the time you can delay updates) seems a pretty clear indication that MS now sees its customers as beta testers.
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Interesting, that is the same KB # of the one which was applied to Windows 8.1 to do the same thing. I figured they'd be different.
Basically from reading the description before I uninstalled it, it was replacing much of the update system to include metrics, and all sorts of stuff which was basically only there to push people to Windows 10 and measure how we'll they're doing.
Essentially Microsoft has swapped out huge parts of the core OS expressly for their own benefit.
I'm on a machine which is only a few m
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MS's update testing seems to have gone to hell lately. In many respects, I am quite tempted by the free update to Win 10 Pro I'm eligible for, but the mandatory updates thing (even if Pro lets you defer them for a while) is putting me off.
You can use gpedit.msc to restore the option to verify before installing updates. And you can hide individual updates indefinitely with a tool they brought out to hide the nvidia driver update.
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You can use gpedit.msc to restore the option to verify before installing updates.
Do the Home versions of Windows10 come with GPEdit.msc? I know that - starting with Windows Vista - the Group Policy Editor (GPEdit.msc) was a feature reserved for the "enterprise" editions only (Pro, Ultimate) and was not included in the Home or Starter editions of the OS. Nominally this was acceptable because Home users have no use for domain-level tools such as a group policy, but unfortunately many Windows features can onl
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Thanks. My grandma was experiencing this problem so I'll be sure to forward your post to her.
Anyone who can't do these things isn't qualified to determine whether an update is dangerous. Most people who can do these things aren't qualified to make that determination.
The fact is that there are Microsoft-supplied means of deferring updates. It's also a fact that they are not obvious; I won't deny it. I'm not a Microsoft-lover. Ask anyone.
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Honestly, you're not describing "not obvious", you're describing "It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard'."
For the average home user, the group policy editor might as well not exist.
Hell, having to read the description of every MS update to determine if it isn't doing some sketchy stuff would damned near be a full time job
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Honestly, you're not describing "not obvious", you're describing "It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard'."
That metaphor worked before Google, but Google is how I found out how to disable Windows 10 updates, and it took me less than two minutes.
maybe I need to turn safe search off... (Score:2)
Maybe I have some spoiled cookies messing up my results.
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I think GP's point is more serious than you're acknowledging. The great selling point of Windows and the reason so many users at the bottom end of the IT-literacy scale cling to it, is the "just works" factor.
Since a year or so into the lifespan of XP (and maybe with a short wobble at the launch of Vista), Windows has done a good job of "just working" for that low-end user. You could give your grandmother a PC, turn on automatic updates for the OS and the antivirus, warn her that it would want a restart onc
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Did MS let go a bunch of QA people like last year? :(
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Yes - I experienced a very similar issue. I chose to upgrade my laptop (which I don't use much) first as a sort of test bed to see how I was going to like it before unleashing it on my desktop/gaming machine. The install hung, then said it needed to revert to Win7 which it did. So I tried again, and it sort of hung in the same spot. Then it kept rebooting and hanging at various percentages of completion. Then it got to 40% (in the big percent cirlce) and hung there. I went to bed, got up in the mornin
What reboot loop? (Score:4, Informative)
This happened yesterday and was fixed within 24 hours. Good work, Slashdot.
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Its not a reboot loop if it recovers. It recovers. It reboots a lot, but it isn't a loop.
From what I've experienced, Win10 has issues with people who have migrated from a standard HD to an SSD using a migration tool. Since this has been fairly common over the last couple years, I suspect that this is the bulk of the "reboot loop" you're seeing. The problem IMHO are the people who have seen the reboot, haven't researched the causes, and are left scratching their heads.
The trick for MS is to quickly identify
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Its not a loop if it stops on its own accord. Loops are ... never ending, by definition.
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Not technically a loop. It is an iteration. Never really like calling it a loop. ;)
Don't bullshit, please (Score:1)
http://answers.microsoft.com/e... [microsoft.com]
The problem was reported Aug 5, and it's gotten worse as on even date, with another patch creating more problems succeeding it.
Where did you get your 'fixed in 24 hours' story from, bro?
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Okay, I got the date it happened wrong, but it is still fixed:
http://www.techradar.com/news/... [techradar.com]
Maybe you should calm down? It's just software.
It fixes itself? (Score:5, Interesting)
Ideally not a true fix, but a workaround, at least.
At least it doesn't render the users' computers inoperable.
I got the update just fine... but the Start Menu Item limitation (512 menu items max) is still not fixed with this update.
Also, the Store and "Movies & TV" windows keep popping up randomly (I believe when I watch something with media player). Very annoying.
One more thing... why the heck is the titlebar/menu coloring a hot mess? All white? There is a theme out there called "colors" that kinda-sorta fixes the issue, but it won't stick the accent color I assigned. At least it makes the desktop less visually messy. It seems that every iteration of Windows has given users fewer and fewer options to change colors and details of the user interface... while making the supplied themes progressively worse. I should be able to make Windows 10 look like XP, if I want to (I don't want to, really).
For the most part, Windows 10 is fine... but annoying leftovers from Windows 8 and this interminable menu limitation is driving me nuts.
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The first thing I do on sitting down in front of a clean Windows install is to make it look as much like Win2k as possible.
Always was my favourite version in terms of UI, though I fully accept that I might just be odd and/or broken.
Re:It fixes itself? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I agree with you completely. I hung on to 2000 for as long as I could. I have grudgingly updated to XP and Win7 as necessary. Nothing specifically wrong with XP or 7 to make me resistant to upgrading to them... But there was nothing wrong with 2000 that made me interested in upgrading away from it. The UI was clean, familiar, and non-obtrusive. Every single version of Windows since it has struck me as a step backwards in terms of usability.
Really the thing that needs to happen is that Microsoft needs to
Quickly fixed (Score:2)
Well well well (Score:2)
Looks like the same old Microsoft, except now they are bitching up people's computers without the owner having options other than BOHICA.
It's a pity, because so far I really like the OS and it's operations except for the privacy issues.
Oh, I see my sacrificial computer has an update, so let's see.......
In my circle, there ar
Solved (Score:2)
Reboot into Mac OSX \s ("had to do it", said the scorpion, riding the turtle across the creek.)
Glad I didn't upgrade (Score:2)
But to be fair, I have experienced update loops in Windows 7 in the past, too :(
More Windows Clickbait (Score:1)
SOME Linux users can't their wifi to work.
SOME Linux users can't print after upgrading..
Yawn.. there are a million threads just on Ubuntuforums.org from people facing problems with Linux.
Delay Windows Update (Score:3)
I disable the Windows Update service until about a week or so after the release of a major update. Then, as long as I haven't seen any reports of people complaining about their machines breaking, I turn the service back on, get the update, and turn it back off again. It's a PITA, but it's better than the alternative.
Oh, I also changed the default setting in Windows 10 to create a restore point automatically prior to applying an update. Windows 10 has that turned off for some reason.
Windows update rot (Score:2)
One of the most irksome aspects of Windows has always been the failed Windows Update. At first it's one update out of a hundred. As your Windows installation ages, it will happen with steadily increasing frequency until every bootup greets you with a half hour of "Please with while Windows is being configured," which is immediately followed by another half hour of painstaking unraveling of the same set of failed updates that failed on the previous boot.
This is generally when I get called in to replace the c
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Typo: "Please wait while Windows is being configured"
Also affects 3081436 (Score:1)
Also affects cumulative hotfix KB-3081436 as well.
Appears to be caused by invalid/orphaned SIDs in registry that need to be pruned.
More info here: https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-update/cumulative-update-for-windows-10-for-x64-based/7df7a262-42e6-4377-adf8-04a3beaed7b6
So what? (Score:1)
Last time I tried to do an Ubuntu upgrade the system needed to be recovered in single user mode. Shit happens, move on.
Had W10 scare myself with display (Score:2)
I would have been ticked if it hadn't come up.. But that goes with any big upgrade. But generally I'm happy with W10. All my apps seem to work (including low-level networking apps like Wireshark.)
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I somehow doubt that Wireshark feels slighted by his comment.
They also broke iSCSI (Score:2)
Microsoft's Quality Control (or lack of it) (Score:2)
.
Microsoft seems to be super concerned about making things easier for itself, and does not seem to be even slightly concerned about making things easier for its customers.
Dual boot linux problems? (Score:2)
I had difficulty installing Win10 on two dual boot machines. Both machines would throw up error messages of one kind or anther. Finally on whim, I removed dual boot capability by disconnecting the GRUB2 drive from one machine making the Win 7 drive the boot drive. I was then able to upgrade to Win 10. The other computer had both Debian and Win 7 installed on the same drive. I needed to use a live boot CD to remove GRUB followed by a boot repair procedure to allow the Win 7 partition to boot. This allowed me
And that is why you wait... (Score:2)
And that is why you wait for Service Pack 1. And never install updates immediately. And never set up auto-update (which of course rules out Win10 Home edition).
Nothing New Here (Score:2)
I experienced the same Reboot Loop problem a month or two ago (as apparently did many others). I had to find and run a (luckily free) program that cleaned up the system and rolled my Win10 Pro Insider Preview back to Build 10074. I've been stuck there ever since, simply postponing (and then closing the window on) any updates.
Not even a full Win10 install solved it: the install would accept neither the "old" Win10 Preview code nor the previous Win7 installation code. No solutions yet.
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> even my grandma can do it!
I thought this was sarcasm until I read your next statement.
Re:better wait (Score:5, Funny)
thats why I am still waiting three months before installin ...
let them go through all the frustrating hassles for me
My computer will be on the 130,000 th reboot by then you insensitive clod
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