remeber to wipe the HDD first ;D

That the tool I used Bob, I even directed the tech to the same tool and explained the iso download option provided through the tool to which he told me there has been a mistake and the iso option shouldn’t be there as a final release iso has not yet been provided.

Another reason to wait a bit, unfortunately. Sorry you’ve had some serious issues.

Not to worry, I left it in the hands of the tech and he set everything up nicely :slight_smile:

I dowloaded from there:https://www.microsoft.com/fr-fr/software-download/windows10
In the control panel/system I have no mention of a preview but yes well the final version of Windows 10 Family edition, French-Canadian :wink:

I have Avast Enterprise Security, Education. I have Installed Windows 10 professional on 5 computers since the final version was punished, all upgrades from Win7 and Win8.1, all finished within 30-40 minutes. All work perfectly, and all software has worked, except Avast Endpoint Protection. I tried re-installing it. Windows 10 will not let it install. So be aware and don’t upgrade until Avast fixes it. :-[

Welcome to the forum. :slight_smile:
I’ve notified Avast. Hope it helps.

Does that issue with the WiFi thing the news has been talking about only effect computers that use WiFi or Ethernet as well? Anyone here know how to disable it?

Be warned, any Add-On GPU’s are a thorough pain in the (blank) to install drivers for. 5 restarts later, and a million downloads, and I have my 760 running the 3 monitors it’s supposed to.

Anyone find Boot times to be very slow?

Hi Coolmario88,

The wifi issue can be settled via privacy settings, else all your social contacts that happen to be near enough to your wifi could come to call and have access. Do you have neighbours on facebook? You’d give them free wifi? On ethernet you have to share wifi - do you have ethernet and wifi? But it is the same as with plug-and-play, it can be disabled, all these issues are a threat to users that do not know anything out of the per default settings. Hope for you, you’re not one of them. As with script, only a threat to those that do not know how to toggle to block the threatening (mostly third party) ones. For the rest of the masses: ignorance is a bliss and this ignorance of the masses a bliss for MS also… ;D.

polonus

I wasn’t getting any notification that the upgrade was ready so I used the Media Creation tool and set it to upgrade. It downloaded very fast and installed in a reasonable time. Since I had done an 8.1 image backup just previously, I went ahead and got rid of the Windows.old folder through CCleaner. I did have a few issues.

My sound worked fine at first but then went out. I uninstalled the sound card through Device Manager but did not delete the driver software. It reinstalled the card immediately and it works fine.

My screen resolution was screwed up. The desktop picture was smaller and centered in the screen and fonts were too small and sometimes cut off at the bottom. I checked the resolution settings and it was at 2544 X 1431 which my monitor doesn’t even support. I set it to 1920 X 1080 and things went back to normal.

After getting the resolution set, my text looked pretty blurry so I had to go through the clearType wizard and set that up.

My Gigabyte utility, EasyTune6, which I was using to control CPU fan speed does not work in Windows 10. I went and got the latest version and it still doesn’t work. It will not load and gives a message about a driver error. Right now I have no fan control except what is given in the BIOS and that makes the fan run too fast and noisy.

Everything else is fine. All my files were kept and all my programs run fine. Even the Free Bitdefender AV is working. Classic Shell works perfectly as well.

I also used a program called winaerotweaker to remove the shortcut arrows from the desktop icons and to enable colored title bars for my programs. It worked perfectly and there are other tweaks that can be applied as well.

I’m up and running but I do think the upgrade could have gone better.

Yes to the slow boot times. It was much faster in Windows 8.1 (Which many didn’t like :cry: )

Well possibly the boot is slower for me as well, but certainly not a huge pain.
The upgrade for me was seamless, with everything functioning as normal. All of the peripheral software I have installed, stayed installed.
Frankly, I’m impressed about my experience.

My boot time is only very slightly slower than it was in 8.1. Only a few seconds. It was very much slower ( a full minute more) until I took the following steps. First, I ran the registry cleaning part of CCleaner which removed over 90 invalid entries. Then I analyzed the disk with Puran Defrag and found it badly fragmented with the registry fragmented into 27 pieces. I did a boot time defrag and optimized directories. Then when the system came back up, I did another defrag and ran the PIOZR optimizer in Puran defrag. After that, like I said, boot time is back almost equal to what it was in 8.1. I’m going to run the Auslogics Registry Cleaner now which is much more thorough and should speed things up a little more.

Thank God for these third party programs.

An Open Letter to Microsoft’s CEO: Don’t Roll Back the Clock on Choice and Control
https://blog.mozilla.org/blog/2015/07/30/an-open-letter-to-microsofts-ceo-dont-roll-back-the-clock-on-choice-and-control/

Here’s what’s next for Windows 10
http://www.theverge.com/2015/7/30/9072271/microsoft-windows-10-updates

According to computeridee.nl Windows 10 uses your computer for updating computer(s) belonging to other people.
Kind of peer to peer network. Standard set on, can be set off.
Has this issue been discussed here?

Kind regards, Hermie

This should help:
Secure sharing of updates with others:
Go to All Settings > Update & Security

http://www.screencast-o-matic.com/screenshots/u/Lh/1438346680724-62704.png

http://www.screencast-o-matic.com/screenshots/u/Lh/1438346855330-14520.png

http://www.screencast-o-matic.com/screenshots/u/Lh/1438346989038-98439.png

Hope that helps. :slight_smile:

@Bob3160 thank you, your advice surely helps!

Kind regards, Hermie

I will have to give this a shot. My boot time is in the minutes after BIOS loads.

Hmm, CCleaner certainly improved things Down to 107.9s… Or ~1m 45s. Still really long for a 7200RPM Hard drive, 16GB of RAM and an Intel core i7 3770…

Time for a Defrag.