New
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Anyone else find that the System Restore feature is disabled as default after build 1903 has been installed?
Anyone else find that the System Restore feature is disabled as default after build 1903 has been installed?
Just checked it on the other PC I just 'updated' using the media creation USB tool and that PC also has System Restore turned off as default. Maybe it's due to the PC's being upgraded and not fresh installs maybe?
Not sure what glorified (and over-abused recently either, bull%^&t bingo anyone?) 'machine learning' term has to do with it? It's a simple matter of verification of device driver installation, following installation scripts and looking for expected results in logs (either related to device or system ones).
What probably has occurred: update engine sensed change to the device driver and decided to postpone update process by few days - whilst observing in the background my system behaviour.
What's curious in this case however is that said updated device driver has been issued by and downloaded from Microsoft directly (as per the link supplied above). And this driver is up & available since early April - so 2 months now.
So, go figure.
Thus, I don't have a problem with not having 1903 offered today as I don't believe it's ready yet - this option will probably return within the next couple of days - but my example simply proves that Microsoft continuously remains not compatible with itself.
Microsoft's language, not mine....
Microsoft automatically modify how they decided if a machine will be offered 1903 based on telemetry from other like machines that have already upgraded. If other machines like ours don't have a 'positive update experience' we are likely to see the offer withdrawn. I've given up trying to understand why Microsoft's 'computer says no'....... I don't have a problem with not having 1903 offered today as I don't believe it's ready yet - this option will probably return within the next couple of days - but my example simply proves that Microsoft continuously remains not compatible with itself.
AI powers Windows 10 April 2018 Update rolloutOur AI/Machine Learning approach started with a pilot program during the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update rollout. We studied characteristics of devices that data indicated had a great update experience and trained our model to spot and target those devices. In our limited trial during the Fall Creators Update rollout, we consistently saw a higher rate of positive update experiences for devices identified using the AI model, with fewer rollbacks, uninstalls, reliability issues, and negative user feedback. For the April 2018 Update rollout, we substantially expanded the scale of AI by developing a robust AI machine learning model to teach the system how to identify the best target devices based on our extensive listening systems.