Microsoft Starts Rolling Out Windows 10 November 2019 Update (venturebeat.com) 42
Microsoft today started rolling out the free Windows 10 November 2019 Update. For those keeping track, this update is Windows 10 build 18363 and will bring Windows 10 to version 1909. From a report: The Windows 10 November 2019 Update (version 1909) is odd because it shares the same Cumulative Update packages as the Windows 10 May 2019 Update (version 1903). That means version 1909 will be delivered more quickly to version 1903 users -- it will install like a monthly security update. The build number will barely change: from build 18362 to build 18363. If two computers have the same servicing content, the build revision number should match: 18362.xxx and 18363.xxx. For developers, this means a new Windows SDK will not be issued in conjunction with this version of Windows (there aren't any new APIs).
Again, the Windows 10 November 2019 Update is not a typical release. It's a much smaller update, though it is still worth getting. Windows 10 version 1909 brings improvements to Windows containers, inking latency, and password recovery. User-facing features include letting third-party digital assistants to voice activate above the Lock screen, being able to create events straight from the Calendar flyout on the Taskbar, and displaying OneDrive content in the File Explorer search box. You may also notice some changes to notification management, better performance and reliability on certain CPUs, and battery life and power efficiency improvements.
Again, the Windows 10 November 2019 Update is not a typical release. It's a much smaller update, though it is still worth getting. Windows 10 version 1909 brings improvements to Windows containers, inking latency, and password recovery. User-facing features include letting third-party digital assistants to voice activate above the Lock screen, being able to create events straight from the Calendar flyout on the Taskbar, and displaying OneDrive content in the File Explorer search box. You may also notice some changes to notification management, better performance and reliability on certain CPUs, and battery life and power efficiency improvements.
edge and delays (Score:5, Informative)
You may also notice annoying notices to restart, an especially slow restart process, and the reappearance of the edge icon in your taskbar that you have already removed 15 times. Beyond that you will not likely notice much else other than less hard drive space.
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I won't notice any of those things, because I only use AmigaOS.
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People bother to remove Edge? I figured it was like the "remove IE" option that just deletes the shortcut to the launcher.
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Re: edge and delays (Score:2)
There is a separate web-engine (which is the same as the one used by Edge) which can't be removed
Just like a drug dealer, the first "taste" is free then you pay and pay and pay and pay...
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and the reappearance of the edge icon in your taskbar that you have already removed 15 times
I'm genuinely curious who these people are who end up with an edge icon magically appear on their taskbar. Do EU customer protection laws insulate us from this stuff or do people like you make this shit up?
Re: edge and delays (Score:2)
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...and Windows 10 users everywhere start spending hours figuring out and rolling back all the pointless and idiotic crap that's in the latest update.
So it goes.
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Link is wrong. (Score:3)
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Microsoft today started rolling out the free Windows 10 November 2019 Update
Yup. Windows 10 updates are free, like herpes and gonorrhea.
Link Trolling (Score:3, Interesting)
n2chere
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Yup, despite the article itself, the bug in windows still exists.
So /. editors don't have a fucking clue about the OS they're reporting on primarily given the article content, but they don't have a fucking clue to start with.
@BeauHD, @msmash, what's your fucking excuse?
Bear in mind I've still got your takeover documents in e-mail because you fucked up on your e-mail system and sent me a copy, thinking I was a contributing member of the board instead of a regular user. I'm more than happy to tell /. how you
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Yup, despite the article itself, the bug in windows still exists.
MacOS isn't a bug in Windows. It's a standalone bug itself.
Internal Slashdot takeover documents? (Score:1)
So
@BeauHD, @msmash, what's your fucking excuse?
Bear in mind I've still got your takeover documents in e-mail because you fucked up on your e-mail system and sent me a copy, thinking I was a contributing member of the board instead of a regular user. I'm more than h
Re: Internal Slashdot takeover documents? (Score:1)
Don't use Win 10, not trolling but (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yes all releases are buggy. It is a mature OS company, one that tests releases on consumers but gives the option to said consumers to delay these updates by up to a year before they are ready.
It's a setting in windows, kind of like those who apt-get dist-upgrade on day 1 and then find they can't resolve a bug no one else seems to have on a forum since they are the only one crazy to rush blindly into every new shiny thing.
Welcome to IT. It pays *not* to be an early adopter, of anything. MS is not unique in t
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Most of the problems I've seen with Windows are design issues, and hardware compatibility has nothing to do with that stuff. It's not like the decision to pre-install Candy Crush by default was because of errata in a Realtek chip.
For Linux, the same applies. I really wish fans would stop using "wifi drivers" as a catch-all excuse in the Linux community, and start putting more pressure on the developers to just... you know, not do stupid shit.
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No sorry, few people care about that stuff. There are deep os level problems with Windows releases, e.g. updates deleting the documents folder for certain users.
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That excuse became invalid when their releases started screwing up their Surface devices.
Also you're wrong, non corporate customers can delay feature updates for up to a year.
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are all releases buggy? Every time one of these releases are announced I read more negative comments followed by rationalizations for why the problems exist. This is a mature OS company, right?
First question yes. Second question, ya gotta define mature, but mostly no.
Tested above-lock-screen - BROKEN (Score:2, Insightful)
You can bypass the lock screen with this stupid shit.
Disabled my cameras and such, Windows unlocked with my Husband's voice instead of mine.
You're a fucking fool to think this will keep you secure in any form.
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They've also reportedly made 'password recovery' easier.
Now, I'm assuming that's your 'Microsoft Password' that you were urged to make instead of a local Windows password.
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About a year ago a Microsoft employee blogged on how some insider editions of Windows had a group policy setting added to disable these questions.
I tweeted to the author, asking why the group policy didn't exist from the moment they forced security questions on us (it was only recently)
Thank fucking God (Score:2)
I was getting tired of reinstalling the whole damned operating system every 6 months (and having all my defaults reset to recommended Microsoft products). It takes me a half-an-hour just to unscrew up all the configs they change back to default in a "feature update."
Suffer from Microsoft Stockholm Syndrome? (Score:2)
So when (Score:2)
is Windows 11 coming out?
Until then I will stick with 7
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is Windows 11 coming out?
Holy crap man that was 1898 version ago.
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Oh, you mean Windows 3? I had that in the early 1990s. 3.1 was a useful upgrade from that.
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Windows search is a write-off due to Microsoft's hard coded cortana malware dependencies which call home/leak even when completely disabled from UI.
Search in Windows XP wasn't great, but it's only gone downhill since then. I recommend "SwiftSearch". Lightning fast.
Free? (Score:2)
Microsoft today started rolling out the free Windows 10 November 2019 Update [venturebeat.com]. [sic]
Was "not free" ever an option?
(And why is TFL in TFS a link to an article about Apple Airpods?)
Well it happened ... (Score:2)
... and so far none of the bad stuff the trolls predicted has occurred. The tester laptop and the POS tablet/2-in-1 got their 1903 cumulative update (took longer than average) then I did the (listed as "optional") 1909. Installed very quickly; the only thing different from a normal cumulative update was a double restart. Haven't tested any of the new "features" because I don't need/use them. All I can say is that, initially, nothing seems to have changed from 1903.
Oh yes: Edge did not reappear on the deskto