New
#160
Doing a reset on Windows 10 Enterprise. Haven't done that for quite awhile. We will see if that helps - otherwise I'I will try a complete reset - otherwise I guess I can get a trial version of Enterprise 1809 somewhere from MS.
Doing a reset on Windows 10 Enterprise. Haven't done that for quite awhile. We will see if that helps - otherwise I'I will try a complete reset - otherwise I guess I can get a trial version of Enterprise 1809 somewhere from MS.
I don't think they are the Evil Empire either, but I do believe they have more than a touch of arrogance. They have long seemed to think they know better what we need than we do ourselves. What Microsoft really should do is pay more attention what what users actually want. It would save them from working so hard on pie-in-the-sky features few want and will have any use for.
Yeah. This is a bizarre update. I do believe my Windows 10 Enterprise is a lost cause and am frankly amazed that Windows for Workstations VM was able to upgrade.
Just made a Virtualbox 6.0 from the 18321 and got a really screwed up Start menu. These two screenshots don't convey the weirdness involved - for example deleting one of the duplicate tabs deletes the other etc etc. This was an install using a valid key and with a new MS account. I would be interested in any other experiences of installing from a 18321 ISO - anybody out there??
I'll lay odds that this is the cause of some of 183312's weirdness - particularly the rebooting issue.
This was posted on ZDNet.
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The latest Windows 10 Insider build, number 18312, introduces a new feature wherein the operating system reserves a big old chunk of disk space, effectively expanding its on-disk footprint by another 7GB.
The storage reservation is to ensure that certain critical operations—most significantly, installing feature updates—always have enough free space available. Windows requires substantial extra disk space both during the installation of each feature update (as it unpacks all the files) and afterward (as the previous version of Windows is kept untouched, so that you can roll back if necessary). Lack of free space is one of the more common reasons for updates failing to install, so Microsoft is setting space available on a long-term basis, allowing those periodic updates to be sure they have what they need.
The exact amount reserved will depend on the optional features and language packs installed, but about 7GB will be typical. The reserved space isn't entirely lost during normal usage, with certain temporary files having their disk usage charged against reserved space rather than free space. Being temporary, such files can be safely discarded each time an update is available to reinstate the full reserved capacity.
The reservation itself is implemented within the NTFS file system. Each file system can have a reservation set, and free disk space will drop by the size of the reservation. Files created for Windows updates are marked specially, allowing their space usage to be charged against the reservation rather than regular free space. It isn't yet clear if the ability to create reservations will be a general-purpose facility. Advanced file systems on some other platforms (such as ZFS in Solaris) include a general reservation facility that operates in a similar way to this update-specific system, so it's not impossible to imagine Microsoft generalizing the capability.
Hi there
On this build :
In a VMWare VM after 2nd re-boot of the VM I can't start anything from the menu (Windows icon). Anything on the task bar though can start -- weird. Worked fine on initial boot after install.
On a VM in KVM (Linux Host Hypervisor) it works although very laggy mouse and keyboard so not really useable until I sort out mouse / keyboard problem. This could be because I'm using an experimental Linux 4.20 latest kernel -- will try again with the standard kernel for the distro.
I don't have enough faith in these latest builds to attempt to use on a "Real" machine yet though --they need to be a bit more stable and not offer what to me seems fairly trivial "features" while ignoring the proper functionality of a professional OS used for other things than Xbox, games, mobile phone connections etc -- nothing wrong with people who want to do those things but this is where perhaps Windows needs to be split - instead of HOME and PRO how about say Business and Consumer where business is a cross between enterprise, pro and workstation while consumer could have all the "gaming" / Xbox stuff and those rediculous store apps in it.
Cheers
jimbo