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#81
There's so much right with W10, but the email/calendar is erratic at best, you can't, or at least I can't, rely on it. Until that's sorted I've gone back to W7.
There's so much right with W10, but the email/calendar is erratic at best, you can't, or at least I can't, rely on it. Until that's sorted I've gone back to W7.
Definitely staying with Win 10.
All 4 Desktop in Win 10 Prof, operating without any problem.
Two laptops in Win 10 Prof and got excellent experience.
Keep two desktop drives. One in Win 7 and Win 8.1 for support purpose!
Agreed!
In all seriousness though, I haven't used my Desktop PC for anything really important for the past 10 months, (except for testing Windows 10! ), but I find I'm way more productive on Windows 10, I'm learning more, all in all, progressing forward.
The odd time I'll go over to Windows 8.1 partition, but I don't do anything there, I don't learn anything there, so......
"To each his own"
EDIT: Yes, I've 'voiced' my share of complaints too!
Last edited by Edwin; 29 Aug 2015 at 16:01.
I'm staying with 10. I see people talk about a learning curve and I just can't see it. I ran Windows 7 Pro for years and loved it and went back once. I didn't like the start menu anymnore and missed the opportunity to be in on something new and progressive.
I was a beta tester for a year prior to this release and the work that MS has done since those early days is extraordinary. The interface has progressed and issues people complained about in 8 and 8.1 have been resolved. There are things still to be worked on and I fully expect MS to issue updates to resolve those in the near future.
I say "well done."
I believe, looking back, that needing to use Reset My PC after the first install led to a much smoother experience afterwards.
The only hitch was reinstalling programs, but that may have been a Good Idea anyway. And nearly all of my important programs were downloads, so I probably avoided reinstalling crud on the W10 side.