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My PC seems much faster with 10 than 8.1. Boot up is much faster and launching Office apps is surprisingly faster too.
My PC seems much faster with 10 than 8.1. Boot up is much faster and launching Office apps is surprisingly faster too.
Conceptually that may be true but it is far from reality.
All one has to do is browse this form and check the broad array of problems after the transition to W10 and some problems have been crippling. I dare say that the majority of these users received the "You Are Good To Go" message". Sure, while W10 may work on any particular system it remains to be seen how well it works. There are too many factors with different operating systems and different PC configurations to consider and there are different methods of installing W10 that can possibly make a huge difference. In my particular situation I received the "Good To Go" message on both my PC's and on 7/29 I upgraded my less important system first and Yes, it worked but tons of errors that have yet to be resolved but for the most part everything worked and that's impressive. Fortunately just hours before I was going to attempt the upgrade on my primary PC I determined and verified through various channels that critical aspects of my hardware configuration were not yet compatible with W10 and would be inoperable with W10 yet I had the "Good To Go" message.
At this point in time I would not recommend the upgrade to W10 at this time on a PC that is very important to your daily routine unless the user has good backup plan to return to your previous OS (preferably a system image) if necessary. Again, just browse this forum, there are plenty of problems with the upgrade. Yes, there are many happy campers but it is still a bit of Roll the Dice and Take Your Chances. Hope for the best but plan for the worst.
Additionally, I have yet to see in writing from MS the recommendation to uninstall your current anti-virus software prior to the upgrade. I did not do so on the PC I upgraded and it did not cause any problems whatsoever.
Do your due diligence, have a good backup plan and be prepared to spend some time sorting out minor issues and go for it. This is NOT your typical Windows Update!
I installed 10 over 7 Home Premium on a Compaq CQ50-105NR from 2008. (AMD Athlon X2 QL60 CPU, nVidia 8200m graphics, nVidia motherboard chipset.) All necessary drivers were either carried over from 7 or updated, with the exception of something for the CPU. (Yellow explanation mark in Device manager for coprocessor.) I fixed that by manually installing the 7 driver. Some of the drivers are MS generic and may not give optimal performance, but everything works.
The upgrade hasn't transformed the laptop into a faster machine, but it's a change.
I didn't turn off Windows Defender during the upgrade on that, or on my two desktop PCs. No problems.
I have installed W10 on a Pentium 4 from 2005. 1 GB of DDR RAM. It runs surprisingly well. I remember to have installed w7 on some 1GB Atom netbooks and it struggled a lot. From w8.x onwards Windows seems more forgiving for 1GB RAM machines. I guess the kernel was improved and was reduced in size. The main issue is to have all necessary drivers.
I've done 7 upgrades now. I've seen a performance improvement on all of them and a couple of them are very low end laptops, even one Acer Aspire One netbook. One Gateway laptop used to drive me nuts it was so slow and now it has come up to not so bad performance. On my home built desktop with older hardware I did have to force some old Windows 7 and even a Windows Vista driver in, but it works great now!