Windows 10 Creators Update, non-Insiders opportunity.

Discussion in 'other software & services' started by Phant0m, Apr 5, 2017.

  1. emmjay

    emmjay Registered Member

    I am wondering what happens after the Creators Update. If MS is expecting 'a high chance of various issues' on older hardware (I am assuming they are referring to a processor that meets requirements for W10 but is older gen) with the CU build that is considered somewhat minor in terms of changes, what is the prospect for a build that incorporates major changes? September might be an unpleasant surprise if the build is major.
     
  2. stapp

    stapp Global Moderator

  3. plat1098

    plat1098 Guest

    Yes, dism..... /restorehealth gets to 98.4% and then says the source files could not be found. I'm not tampering with the registry as was proposed in the thread. Undoubtedly, this will get fixed sometime down the road.
     
  4. Phant0m

    Phant0m Registered Member

    I've noticed this from the very beginning. I've tried several things to no avail. However it is definitely Microsoft issue needing to be addressed. Has to-do with CBS Manifest Corruption of Microsoft-Windows-TestRoot-and-FlightSigning-Package~31bf3856ad364e35~amd64~~10.0.15063.0. Sit back and relax and hope Microsoft will get around to addressing this. In the mean-time everything should be working alright. ;)
     
  5. Krusty

    Krusty Registered Member

    Quick question - If you reset Windows 10 and select to save files I know it removes installed programs but does it wipe installers in your download folder too?
     
  6. roger_m

    roger_m Registered Member

    No it doesn't.
     
  7. Krusty

    Krusty Registered Member

  8. Pliskin

    Pliskin Registered Member

  9. NormanF

    NormanF Registered Member

    I did a clean install of 2016 Windows 10 Enterprise LTSB.

    Default start menu drove me crazy... I installed Classic Shell and enabled the Classic Start Menu. Now it works!

    LTSB doesn't have Edge, Cortana or universal apps. Perfect for long term stability.
     
  10. guest

    guest Guest

  11. WildByDesign

    WildByDesign Registered Member

    This 465 services was specific to machines which were 64-bit and had (I believe 4GB or higher RAM) more memory and what MS had done was split off all of the services which were crammed into svchost.exe for many years. So therefore on 64-bit machines with more RAM, this has much greater performance benefits as well as reliability and stability and of course in the end, more granularity to control which of those services can be enabled/disabled individually. 32-bit machines or machines with less RAM wont have the svchost.exe split off. Remember back in the day when one svchost.exe crash would take down nearly all services? :)
     
  12. Pliskin

    Pliskin Registered Member

    Thank you, good to know.
     
  13. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

    I had not noticed this yet. Nice! This must be at least part of why this version runs so well.
     
  14. Minimalist

    Minimalist Registered Member

    That's good news :thumb:. Now we'll be able to see which service is causing troubles high CPU, disk activity... Also firewall rules could now be created easier. Granular control OTOH over disabling/enabling was possible even before (using services.msc).
     
  15. ronjor

    ronjor Global Moderator

  16. NormanF

    NormanF Registered Member

    That news is why I opted to install the stable version of Windows 10.

    Consumer versions suck because they're a perpetual beta.
     
  17. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

    The Fast Ring is a perpetual beta. The Creators Update is the most stable version of Windows 10 I have encountered yet. All versions will have hardware and configuration specific issues. Stick with what works for you obviously, but I see no reason for the general public to avoid this one unless you are affected by one of the specifically mentioned issues.
     
  18. NormanF

    NormanF Registered Member

    Microsoft wants to sell people on the idea they need to be constantly on the bleeding edge with a constant flow of updates and new features.

    Irrelevant from the viewpoint of most computer users, who simply want an operating system that works.
     
  19. JRViejo

    JRViejo Super Moderator

  20. itman

    itman Registered Member

  21. NormanF

    NormanF Registered Member

    No worries here. I'm on the LTS branch so odds are good I'll never see it.
     
  22. Phant0m

    Phant0m Registered Member

    Windows 10 Creators Update is the best one yet, and this isn't just a personal opinion. ;)
     
  23. ronjor

    ronjor Global Moderator

    Microsoft announces Windows 10 Fall Creators Update

     
  24. NormanF

    NormanF Registered Member

    Confirms Windows is a rolling release like Ubuntu.

    Except Microsoft isn't making LTS available for consumer use. It should.
     
  25. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

    Agreed. This runs way better than any previous version of Windows 10. Or Windows anything for that matter. I have updated every machine I have access to (at least 15) and have had 0 issues. I haven't seen a crash on a single machine since updating them. Which is amazing considering some of my users. :eek:
     
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