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Microsoft Operating Systems Windows

Windows 10 Anniversary Update Rollout May Not Be Done Until Early November (zdnet.com) 88

Microsoft released Windows 10 Anniversary Update last month. But the trickling of the company's latest major update users could take as much as three months, the company has said. Many users have been complaining about not seeing an update pop-up on their system. When ZDNet's reporter Mary Jo Foley asked Microsoft about this, the company confirmed that it hadn't seeded the update to all Windows 10 users. From the report: Microsoft began rolling out the latest version of Windows 10, the Anniversary Update, on August 2. At that time, Microsoft officials said the rollout would be staggered, but didn't get too explicit as to how -- or how long it might take the company to push Windows 10 Anniversary to consumers and business users who are on the so-called Current Branch of Windows 10. It's worth repeating that those who really want the Anniversary Update immediately have options to proactively go get it. I received a Microsoft blast email just over a week ago that included a footnote that mentioned it might take up to three months for Microsoft to push the Anniversary Update to those set up to get it. That means those currently waiting may still have another month and a half to wait.
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Windows 10 Anniversary Update Rollout May Not Be Done Until Early November

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  • Noooo!!! (Score:1, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    I want more government spying now!!!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I haven't been able to update since day one. It constantly downloads, reboots whenever it likes, installs, fails, rolls back, reboots, then tries all over again. I'm glad i don't use it for anything but playing a game and some work related stuff else I'd be even more disappointed. Maybe one day I'll try to reinstall it but for now I just don't care

    • Are you using GRUB to boot? Temporarily switch to Windows Boot Manager instead, install the update, then switch back to GRUB. I haven't gotten around to it yet, but I'm fairly sure this is the fix.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I tried WBM, but then three guys burst into my house, held me down, and gang raped me for three hours. I'm pretty certain these events were related.

        • It's called Windows Butt Monitoring. It's a new part of their standard telemetry where they assess size, shape, and pliability in order to better serve you.
    • This happened to me at one point. I was using an insider build and was on the fast update ring.

      I had to do a clean install. I went back to the stable build when I did that.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @12:14PM (#52886953)
    Maybe Microsoft wants to roll it out slowly because it did not do enough QA on the release to assure it would be a smooth release cycle. So the early ones to get it are likely the real-world testers.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      its not untrue. there have been 4 additional patches already.

    • I would really prefer that this not happen. [betanews.com]

      I run grub, which has killed previous updates. Microsoft needs to have greater respect for the operating systems that I have installed on my PC. If I have to lose one, I'd prefer it not be Linux or BSD.

      • It's not even just Linux partitions, the update resulted in windows no longer recognizing the existence of an NTFS (non-boot) drive. All the data was still there, Windows just messed up the partition structure enough that it couldn't mount it. 3rd party recovery tools reconstructed it just fine.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      More like NO QA in Redmond, they were all laid off. The SDLC concept for Windows 10 seems to be:

      • * Insiders are the alpha testers, but at least they volunteered for that.
      • * The general public are unwitting surveillance subjects and beta testers. Microsoft will Do The Needful to your computer whether you want it done or not. These mandatory patches can make your computer stop working, blue screen, lose data, or somehow fuck up previously perfectly working peripherals at any time. You can't decline a patch eve
      • by Creepy ( 93888 )

        That isn't to say they don't have product testing - I believe they have product testing in India and Romania, possibly other countries. Everyone I know that worked in Redmond works different jobs now, so I assume they were let go.

    • Like I mentioned above, aside from being good, since Windows 10 is supposed to be the last version of Windows, and everything thereafter is an update, that too a rolling one, they should be under no pressure to have periodic releases, but just release an update after exhaustive testing - whether by beta testers or internal engineers
    • by Creepy ( 93888 )

      That wouldn't surprise me - I had two cousins testing for them for a long time (at least 20 and 16 years) and both got new jobs within the past two years without mentioning why. I also had a release critical defect for one of my company's products that only happens on Windows Anniversary, but that was deferred because we only support Windows Pro and it won't be forced onto Pro for 3 months (I tested it on my home machine that didn't have pro, as well as work machines with it - it is technically supposed to

    • Why must I relearn everything after every upgrade? There is no minimize on this firefox browser. To minimize it I must hit the windows key since clicking on the icon on the task bar does nothing. There is now only a icon for all apps so I have to click it to get all apps. There is an icon for settings but it just another thing that must be learned. Microsoft games do not work right either. Some of the time when I click on say minesweeper it just show the initial screen and than does nothing. I either

  • Despite an update to the update Microsoft claims fixes the system freeze, I have yet to get Anniversary update to work correctly. Freezes my entire machine a few minutes after login. Here's hoping there's an update to the update to the update.
  • Hey, if they pushed the update to everyone at once, they'd put a big load on the servers - which would undoubtedly crash, since they're running Windows.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    First they complain about the update popup bugging them, now they miss it.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Typical Slashdot, anything Microsoft does is bad, even when it's the exact opposite of what they did previously.
  • Get your ass into gear and migrate to Linux, we only have 2 more months before our computers get bricked.

    • by The-Ixian ( 168184 ) on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @01:25PM (#52887511)

      I run Linux on my personal laptop. Always have. My gaming rig runs Windows 10 and is perfectly fine; It runs like a top.

      Operating systems are just tools, use whatever makes the most sense for the job.

      • Operating systems are just tools, use whatever makes the most sense for the job.

        Finally, a breath of fresh air.

        I'm an unabashed Linux fan and use it for everything. That's my choice and preference.

        If Windows or Mac or WhoKnowsWhat suits you better, that's your choice and preference.

        • This isn't entirely fair. People have to use Windows if they want certain applications to run. That's like saying it's your own fault that you got arrested for smoking pot, could've moved to Amsterdam.

          • I can see how you read that into my comment, so perhaps I should have been more clear. I didn't distinguish between "choose to use" and "have to use" but in retrospect of course I see they're different things.

            So let's just say if you want or need to use Windows (or whatever the case may be), then indeed that's consistent with the original comment about using the right tool for the job, where "right" may derive from absolute necessity on down through merely preference or familiarity.

            In other words, while I'm

            • OK, now I got you.

              The comment just ruffled me the wrong way 'cause I have a few friends (non-technical friends) who keep bugging me for a way to get away from Windows and into Linux, unfortunately they both are shackled by the necessity of using it due to certain things still not working well in Linux, notably gaming and certain special software packages only available in Windows (and of course not working right in Wine).

              We have arrived at the point where Windows managed to piss off people who never really

      • My gaming rig runs Windows 10 and is perfectly fine; It runs like a top.

        Gradually gets slower and slower over time, until it crashes? Yeah, that's pretty typical.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by kruug ( 4451395 )
      Your computer won't get "bricked". There are no reports of a computer getting "bricked" due to Windows 10. Please stop with the FUD.
  • Anyone figured out where they moved the "Password protection on wakeup" setting to in the AU?

    I have a lot of computers with no password so the prompt is just a PITA.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 14, 2016 @12:49PM (#52887195)

    It was rolled out to newer systems with UEFI and Secureboot first. My new laptop got it day one.

    If you use the media creation tool it will create a windows 10 ISO/DVD/USB drive with the anniversary update (Version 1607) already installed.

    The big releases are pretty much a reinstall anyway - The entire OS get swapped out during the update. One of the reasons they are going these "big" releases is so you don't end up with the problem of previous windows versions - IE the latest official media (Win7 sp1, win 8 RTM, or win 8.1 RTM) All have 150+ updates or more after a clean install.In win7's case you end up downloading 2x more data than the original size of the win7 media itself.

    Another problem with all those updates is you run in to platform constancy issues. After hundreds of updates something can go wrong, and you end up with situations like windows update being broken out of the box. Big releases are a periodic refresh that gets everything back to a reference point. Do that at least once a year and updates are easier to deal with.

    • Why not call them SP's or even windows 10.X then?

      Just to make things easier for people to do a quick check to see what ver they are running?

    • It was rolled out to newer systems with UEFI and Secureboot first. My new laptop got it day one.

      Not at all. Many Surface users waited for a good month with no rhyme nor reason between their delays. UEFI, Secureboot, TPM, and Microsoft frigging customised hardware to boot (pun intended).

      There really seems to be very little pattern here.

  • We are not married to Windows 10 you know.

  • I have the Anniversary running on 3 computers since the first week of general availability. After the last update, one of the computer's task bar would be unclickable if I left the computer running more than 3 hours. Haven't had time to track down the problem but I'm going to guess it's because of GeForce Experience. GE has been so problematic for me. If I started after running a game it would fail to start.

  • Just by going to Microsoft site and download the update, I did it, it works fine. A quick google search gives me:

    https://support.microsoft.com/... [microsoft.com]
  • After several occasions where windows decided to update itself without giving me any other options, installing faulty drivers that required removing the driver and all settings for the device, wasting time and money, then proclaiming triumphantly that all my files are where I left them, as if not destroying all my files is some sort of fucking achievement and not the least you can fucking expect...
    No Microsoft, I'm not installing your fucking updates, hopefully disabling the update service will take care of

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