Isn't that irritating? MVPs on Microsoft's forums do that 90% of the time, providing a worthless reply to what was asked.
I should have specified what I meant by environment, which is hardware [mainly MB and anything physically attached to it], and 3rd party drivers and software.
I only have Win 10 running on my personal laptop (AW 18), however I'm usually on this forum, Spiceworks, or Microsoft's answer forum daily chiming in on issues users are having with their devices since upgrading to 10; however, besides building my own custom deployment for my PC with MDT, I have no experience with deploying multiple machines in a business setting.
Have you tried adjusting any of the flags on Chrome (chrome://flags)? Here's the most common causes I've come across for wonkiness with Windows 10:
- not clean installing and performing the correct chronological steps afterwards
- utilizing non-Win 10 drivers for system critical hardware (anything attached to the motherboard), with the exception of CPU drivers [Chipset, IMEI, etc.), which must be installed regardless of what OS they were originally built for.
- Installing Windows 10 driver packagers in which the manufacturer or OEM has inadvertently included Windows 8 dll's and sys files in the Win 10 driver package (Broadcom/Dell Wireless WiFi AC drivers for Win 10 fall into this category) This would result in BSODs and fault messages.
- Installing internet security software (antivirus/malware/HIPS/etc.) that may claim itself to be Windows 10 compatible, but in reality is not. This may or may not still be an issue, however I know a few months back users installing IS software from a major IS developer had issues, as while the software claimed to be Windows 10 compatible, in reality it wasn't (I vaguely remember the name of the company, however since I'm not 100% sure I'm recalling the name correctly, I don't believe it's okay to post it)
None of this is to say there aren't minor bugs in Windows 10 that aren't environment related, there are. For example, a pre-RTM bug popped up again in build 1511 that prevents the installation of TCP/IP services for network adapters, providing an error that implies group policy is blocking it, even though it isn't. Another is corruption caused to WinSxS's (specifically wow64_microsoft-windows-r..xwddmdriver-wow64-c_31bf3856ad364e35_10.0.10586.0_none_3dae054b56911c22) backup of opencl.dll, as well as the opencl.dll contained within the system directory upon installation of AMD drivers.
Your specific problem appears to be graphics driver related (unless the two PCs mentioned were the only ones with that specific issue).
- In regards to integrated drivers, did you install the latest ones direct from from Intel for Windows 10 (I don't recommend installing OEM approved drivers, unless there's no other alternative or it's CPU related drivers, mainly because they're always out of date and are more akin to the way carriers treat Android)? (Same goes for the discrete [GPU] drivers.)
- Did you also install the Intel RST drivers, as these are required for integrated graphics to work properly (I have no clue why, ,however I do know several issues that are caused by not having them installed, or not having an updated version installed, one of which is the infamous black screen with only a mouse cursor issue).
- Have you verified your running the most up to date BIOS as well as the video firmware for your GPUs?