New
#310
I agree wholeheartedly.
As I have no chance of going to Insider Heaven, I am happy to express my VERY low opinion of the current leadership and their ridiculously childish image e.g.
Ninja cats
Hustle as a Service
Deets
Hell when did term flight come to mean build?
Really mature leaders would accept criticism and strive to improve.
Insider Prison = advanced builds of Windows 3.1 and 3.1.1, both served cold with stale bread.
At 4PM everyday you face Redmond and pray to Insider Boss in your native language.
You Feedback Hub is connected to your ex-wife/husband's attorney
You are allowed to use Edge only after passing a "patience" test and providing documentation of proper medication from your doctor.
You get daily emails asking to contribute to the Ninja Cat fund of North America
You are forced to eat Tacos for dinner every day.
Yes, your criticism is always constructive. You always lay the facts out. Not everyone can take having their mistakes pointed out. :)
So far, this is the only Microsoft thing I can find about updating from Anniversary to Creators. I'm sure there are more articles out there.
This link lets you go to your computer manufacturer's site to check whether it will take Creators Update or not. I'm wondering whether your neighbors were giving you erroneous info?
Check this List to Determine if Your Computer is Compatible with the - Microsoft Community
Whoops, Andre, I saw that, but because "loosing" is so much used instead of the proper "losing", I just went right over it.
Lose
Lose can only be used as a verb. It describes when you “come to be without something” (e.g. “to lose a sock in the laundry”) or “to suffer defeat or fail to win” (e.g. “to lose a soccer game”). Its spelling might make you think it rhymes with hose and chose, but it actually rhymes with choose and shoes. The S has a Z sound.
Loose
Loose rhymes with goose and moose, and is almost always used as an adjective. It can mean “free from restraints or binds” (e.g. “The dog runs loose in the yard”), “not bound together” (e.g. “She let her hair hang loose”), or “not fitting closely or tightly” (e.g. “The shirt was loose on me, so I bought the next size down”). It can also refer to something that isn’t very strict, or something that’s relaxed or limber.
Then there's the old fashioned use of loose as a verb that still shows up in today's English. Sometimes you may see loose being used to mean “to release” or “to set free.” For example, instead of proclaiming “Release the kraken!” when you want to set a sea monster on your enemies, you could say “Loose the kraken!” However, this is generally considered an outdated use of the word.
Which is what you did in this instance; "potential for loosing (setting free) 10 minutes to check what it means". :)