Windows 10 is Great, Except for the Parts That Are Terrible
Category: Health, Science & Technology
Via: jerry-verlinger • 10 years ago • 16 commentsWindows 10 is a great upgrade.Microsoft paid a lot of attention to the feedback they ignored while developing Windows 8, and it shows. Unfortunately, some parts of Windows 10 areinexplicably bad and hostile to users.
While Windows 10 as a whole shows Microsoft listening to feedback, parts of it show the same old Microsoft that dug its feet in and announced products like the original Xbox One and Windows 8 without appearing tocareabout many users.
It Uses Your Upload Bandwidth Without Even Telling You
By default, Windows 10 automatically uploads Windows updates and apps from the Windows Store to other PCsover the Internet. This is a great feature when restricted to the local network, but Microsoft opts everyone into the Internet part of it by default, using your upload bandwidth for something that doesnt help you.
Worse yet, theres no indication this is happening unless you read about it online, find your Internet connection slow, or get contacted by your Internet service providerbecause youre using up your limited upload bandwidth.
It could appear as an option in the custom setup process or a note about it could appear somewhere, but it doesnt it just works in the background. You have to find a special option hidden five clicks deep in the operatingsystem to disableit.
Thispotentially helps everyone download updates faster its basically like BitTorrent for Windows updates. But many people, especially outside the USA, have connections with upload data caps. Microsoft is saving some money on bandwidth bills by using customers Internet connections, without telling them.
Few Options for Automatic Updates Hurt People on Limited Internet Connections
Windows 10 forces all home PCs to automatically download and install updates. Thats good in one way, as it keeps home Windows systems secure.
But theres a big problem with this: Its not implemented in a respectful way.You can only configure the time Windows reboots not when it downloads updates.
Many people again, especially outside the USA, but also in more remote or ruralareas in the US have Internet connections with bandwidth caps. They cant necessarily download hundreds of megabytes of updates every single week. Some people have unlimited bandwidth during certain hours only perhaps during the middle of the night. Windows 10 provides no way to tell Windows to only download updates during these uncapped hours.
The one solution to this for home users is setting a connection as metered. Microsoft says you should set every connection with a data cap as a metered connection. This will give youcontrol over when you download updates.
Theres just one big problem: Microsoft doesnt let you set a wired Ethernet connection as a metered connection. If your home Internet service provider has data caps and youre hooked up via a normal Ethernet connection, theres no way to restrict those Windows Updates without shelling out $100 for the Professional edition of Windows 10.
This is reminiscent of the original Xbox One, which demanded a nearly always-on Internet connection. Microsoft just assumes all its users have broadband Internet connections without any data caps and doesnt seem to understand the connections many people have to deal with.
People Are Upset About Privacy, and Microsoft Isnt Communicating Well
Windows 10 is currently under a firestorm of controversy even now being discussed inthe mainstream media over privacy concerns. Windows 10 is a big shift from Windows 7 and includes many more features that phone home to the mothership. Some of these cant even be disabled. For example, thetelemetry feature can only be disabled entirely on Enterprise versions of Windows.
Microsoft should be explaining this a lot better and making it simpler to understand. We categorized 30 different privacy settings located all across Windows 10s interface and the web, some of which offered confusingly vague explanations. Had Microsoft arranged these options in a better way with more explanation, they at least could have dulled some of the criticism. We feel a lot of the criticism is overblown, but Microsoft isnt helping itself by remaining silent.
Worse yet, Microsoft is charging onwards despite criticism. Updates to Windows 7 and 8.1 add the telemetry servicefrom Windows 10 , making Windows users sticking with older versions of Windows for privacy reasons upset.
By applying this service, you can add benefits from the latest version of Windows to systems that have not yet upgraded, says Microsofts patch note. Thats just a ridiculous explanation Microsoft may be getting some benefit out of collecting telemetry data, but the average Windows 7 or 8 user isnt getting a benefit from the latest version of Windows after the telemetry service is installed.
Microsoft Wont Give You Patch Notes; Deal With It
Microsoft is charging ahead with their vision of Windows as a service, planning to constantly update Windows 10 with new features going forward. Faced with all these constant updates, you or businesses concerned about change might want to see what these updates actually do.
But Microsoft has no plans to actually provide any patch notes so you can figure out what theyre changing. Microsoft might occasionally provide information about big changes if they feel like it, but thats it. There are now reports that Microsoft may provide some patch notes to enterprises, but that would be it.
Microsoft is planning on updating Windows 10 on a continual basis with more than just security and bugfixes with new features, changes, low-level modifications, and more. But Microsoft isnt willing to actually inform their customers whats changing.
The Start Menuis Flashy and Missing Basic Functionality
After years of using Windows 8 and then 8.1, any Start menu at all seems like a huge upgrade. But Windows 10s Start menu actually isnt all that great when you compare it to Windows 7s . Microsoft added flashy live tiles and removed useful features. It may not work as well as it used to, but it doesbombard you with information about hamburgers and Lady Gaga and footballwhen you open it.
Theres no way to pin apps you regularly use to the left side of theStart menu, for example. Worse yet, the Start menu now works in an entirely different way. It only supports 500 entries and will break after you add more than 500 shortcuts , just not displaying shortcuts to applications youve installed. They wont be accessible via the Start menus search feature, either. Thats just sloppyand shows Microsoft is more worried about making a flashy live tile Start menu than a tool that will actually be robust in the real world for the PC users who need it most.
Metro Apps Are StillPractically Unusable
Thom Holwerda from OSNews writes that Windows 10 is only well reviewed because its free and because reviewers havent forced themselves to use only those Metro apps, now called universal apps.
Youll still be mostly using desktop apps if you want a good experience on Windows 10. Even Microsoft themselves dont seem confident about universal apps. Microsoft unceremoniously killed the universal version of Skype a month before Windows 10 was out they want you to use the desktop Skype app instead. The Metro versions of Office 2016 are all called Mobile versions to encourage you to not use them and get the traditional desktop apps instead.
Even apps that are seeing a lot of development arent quite there yet. Microsoft Edge has a lot of issues, even when doing something as simple as dragging a tab out of a window.
Remember, Windows 8 came out in 2012. Its been three years, and those Metro/universal apps still arent compelling. Really, Microsoft was working on the Metro platform for years before Windows 8 was released, so Microsofts best and brightest have had 5-6 years to release some awesome apps and show everyone how its done. Instead, we have the Skype team going back to the desktop app and the Office team telling people not to use the universal apps on PCs. Those universal apps are just meant for smartphones and small tablets thats what the Office team at Microsoft is telling us.
Maybe theyll be more successful once developers can simply port their iPad apps to the Windows Store. Unfortunately for Microsoft, most PC users probably wont want to use iPad apps on their desktop.
Windows 10 includes Get Skype and Get Office apps, which are literally just universal apps that just tell you to download the desktop apps. Microsoft is also using these ads to spam Windows 10 users with ads ,so they do have another function.
Mandatory Driver Updates Can BreakSome Systems
Mandatory driver updates are another issue rather than just pushing MIcrosofts own Windows updates to everyone, Microsoft is forcing you to install the latest drivers it thinks will work on your computer. Theres no way to opt out of these drivers if they dont work for your hardware. Install your own custom drivers and Windows Update will repeatedly install its own drivers over your own custom ones.
Theres still a Do you want Windows to download driver software setting buried in Windows that claims it will stop Windows Update from installing drivers, but it doesnt actually work. Microsoft didnt bother removing it, though, which just confuses everyone.
The only way to get around this is by blocking individual driver updates with a special tool you have to downloadfrom Microsofts website . But youll get new drivers when a newer version appears in Windows Update.
Mandatory security updates are one thing, but Microsoft should allow PC users to have control over their specific hardware drivers if they need it even if this is just a hidden option you have to enable.
These are just a few of the ways Windows 10 falls flat on its face.There are certainly others. The continued separation between the Settings and Control Panel apps is silly. The white titlebars are ugly to many people and a sad step back from the colorful Windows 8, although Microsoft seems to be realizing their mistake and adding color choice back in.
Andpeople who depended on the unique placeholder files functionality in Microsoft OneDrive on Windows 8.1 will be disappointed to find its been completely removed in Windows 10 .
Image Credit:TechStage on Flickr
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I haven't uploaded 10 yet. I spoke to a couple of Norton Security techs and both told me it might be wise to wait at least until October before installing it. One of them seemed enthusiastic about the program, but that was when it was first released. In the other, more recent conversation I had with a Norton tech, I was warned it definitely would be a good idea to hold off, claiming there were more than a few problems with the program.
Now, after reading this article, I understand what they were referring to, and I'm glad I'm still on 7.
Have you gone to 10 yet? If so, what has been your experience with it?
They keep trying to give me a free upgrade to 10. I am not going to do it. I have 7 and it works fine.
Yeah it does.
I had gone to 8 when it first came out and I didn't like it at all. It seemed like not too many other people liked it either. But I was in the market for a new 'puter at the time, so when I bought one and was given the option of getting either 7 or 8, I went back to 7.
I don't know what it is about these techies, I guess they get bored when they have a system that is working properly and they need to find something to do with themselves. But the problem is, everything time they come up with a "new and improved" version of their perfectly fine program, it has more bugs in it than an abandoned dumpster.
Look what happened to Newsvine, they had a perfectly fine news site, but no, they had to tinker. Well after a year of tinkering, when Tyler finally hit the 'Start' button on the new version, the fucking place blew up on him.
Right. The damn pop up keeps coming up every time I turn on the computer. I want nothing to do with Windows 10 (or even the versions of 8). Windows 7 works just fine and I mean to keep it that way. If that means refusing any more updates, then that's the way it will have to be.
Having met a few of them, I've got a pretty good idea about them Jerry. They tend to have the mindset that computers and their programs are ends in themselves, rather than working tools to achieve the simplest possible means to an end. Also, they are so enthused about computers and experimenting with them that they simply cannot conceive of the idea that most people aren't that interested in the technical aspects. Seems to be an endemic disease among technical people in general. My auto mechanic simply can't understand that I don't really care about new style valves or torque ratios; all I want is for the damn thing to start when I turn the key.
I have 8.1 which came pre-loaded on this laptop (present from my wife after I spilled POP all over my last one) and have no problems with it. Yes I think the large tiles are childish looking, but except for the one that takes me to the desktop, I don't use any of them. I upgraded to 10, but only for a few weeks. It felt clunky to me (hard to describe) and the tiles were still there, but were just smaller and moved to the side of the start button menu and I still didn't use any of them. One of the happy-happy-joy-joy's of 10 is that you get your start button back, but 8.1 has one, it just doesn't say start and you have to right click instead of left click. Big deal.
After a few weeks of the clunkiness and seeing no advantage at all to 10, I went back to 8.1, which you can do for free if it's been less then a month since you got 10. That was a pain in ass since when you upgrade from 8.1 it's supposed to leave you a recovery button under Recovery in your system that will change you back to 7 (if that's what you had) and one for 8.1, but mine only left me one recovery button and it was back to 7 and I've never had 7 on here! I called Microsoft (actually chatted since they had an hour and a half wait time on the phone) and after much trying to convince them that I had not upgraded from 7 to 8.1 and then to 10 and no it didn't come with a disk and that it was pre-loaded with no product key and BTW why don't I like 10 and on and on and on, until they finally signed on to my laptop, changed a few things around and I got an 8.1 recovery button.
I recovered fine and I still get messages telling me my system is ready for a download upgrade to 10, but to tell you the truth, I just don't see why I would want to? I might, just before it stops being free, but only if someone can point out some kind of fantastic bells and whistles that 10 has, that 8.1 doesn't. Hell, I don't use the bells and whistles of 8.1! I just go to the desktop and it's like I'm using a much faster version of XP.
I have Vista on my desk top Dell and it's OK. It quite slow, but other then that I don't have much to bitch about with it. Did I mention it's slow?
I have a low-end Dell laptop, that is one of the only ones I've seen with no CD/DVD drive at all. Not even a slot. I bought a CDR/DVD player on ebay for like $10 or so and it just plugs into one of the USB ports, but it's in a desk drawer or on a bookshelf somewhere and really have no need for one. I watch DVDs (and VHS tapes) on my TV and listen to music only when I'm driving and I have Sirius for that. Except for arguing online on NT I don't use my computers much. I check my facebook, email, gmail, etc., but since I've retired I don't need one for business, so I'm good to go.
lol! Yeah it does. Seems they think they always have to tinker and tweak everything, constantly 'fixing' things that aren't broken.
Aol got me involved in a Beta Test years ago. That was it for me, I've never done one since and I never will. You're right Raven, the techies listen to no one, and blame every failure on the testers.
The IT depts get big time pressure from the Microsoft Corporate because Corp is trying to launch their major upgrades before Apple Launchessomethingnew.
I'm gone! That's it for me.
I had a feeling when I posted this article I was getting in over my head. And "Idualbooted ...." isdefinitelyover my head.
The only thing I know about boots is how to polish them.
Thanks for that input Raven, you have provided us with very valuable information. It's good to know you have an inside track regarding MS Corporate.
I had a feeling when I posted this article that I was going to get in over my head and "I duel booted ...."
What the hell was that all about?! It's like the thread fell off a goddamn cliff!
Thanks for those links Raven, it's reasonable to assume they'll get the bugs out of 10 and people will start using it sooner or later. But eventually MS is going to start charging for the DL, if it's burned to a DVR or Thumb, will they still be good after MS starts charging for the DL?