That's great that you know how to do that, but how many people actually know how to do that? A vast majority of computer users (even Linux users from my experience) don't know how to do that. And since this is targeting Home users, it's targeting the people least likely to know that.TechNoFear said:It would take me less than an hour to write an app to allow me to control when it updates...
It isn't that people understand Windows better than Microsoft. It is that people understand their current needs better than Microsoft. What if I don't want my Internet being taken up at the moment because of other stuff I'm doing? What if I want to wait a day or two to see if any problems arise? What if I recognize that the update doesn't apply to me personally for whatever reason? Microsoft may understand Windows better than almost anyone, but they do not understand everyone's personal needs better than those people do.Olas said:It seems pretty crazy to think that you know better than Microsoft.
I'm pretty sure the download would be either lowest priority, or would only happen when the computer is shutting down. I've never had my internet speed affected because of Windows downloading an update.MysticSlayer said:It isn't that people understand Windows better than Microsoft. It is that people understand their current needs better than Microsoft. What if I don't want my Internet being taken up at the moment because of other stuff I'm doing?Olas said:It seems pretty crazy to think that you know better than Microsoft.
Well, I guess you have to trust that Microsoft tests their updates before release. I won't deny that you have a point here, I guess you could always wait to restart your computer.What if I want to wait a day or two to see if any problems arise?
Then why would you care? Also, that's an unlikely if.What if I recognize that the update doesn't apply to me personally for whatever reason?
That's what the control panel and personalization settings are for. You don't personalize your computer by selectively downloading updates. Besides, I'm pretty sure it makes things easier all around when Microsoft knows everybody is running the same software, rather than having 50 different versions based on different updates.Microsoft may understand Windows better than almost anyone, but they do not understand everyone's personal needs better than those people do.
Erm, it's a almost certain if.Olas said:Then why would you care? Also, that's an unlikely if.What if I recognize that the update doesn't apply to me personally for whatever reason?
That's quite an awful work-around. It doesn't account for things going wrong, like potential power outages, and completely ignores any user that wants to keep their computer off when not using it (or just at night). It also assumes that Windows won't crap out and restart for some bizarre reason, which is something I've seen happen plenty of times, even while people are giving presentations.Olas said:Well, I guess you have to trust that Microsoft tests their updates before release. I won't deny that you have a point here, I guess you could always wait to restart your computer.What if I want to wait a day or two to see if any problems arise?
And why would I take an update to something I'd never use? It isn't something I like to do. If I can't remove it, I'd rather it just sit buried, not getting touched. Why would I need any more reason than that? It's my computer, not yours. (Note: "yours" isn't referring to you personally, just people in general).Then why would you care?What if I recognize that the update doesn't apply to me personally for whatever reason?
Unless I want to have control over what's going on to the computer. As I've hinted at above, that's reasonably important to me. Sure, there are times that I'm going to have software installed once I get the computer, but even then, I'm often looking for ways to remove what I can and keep off what I don't want. Again, my computer, not yours.That's what the control panel and personalization settings are for. You don't personalize your computer by selectively downloading updates.Microsoft may understand Windows better than almost anyone, but they do not understand everyone's personal needs better than those people do.
My point wasn't that it was unlikely that the updates wouldn't be important. My point was that it's unlikely that you, the end user, will be able to KNOW that the updates won't be important. Unless someone wants to spend their time carefully reading up on each update to understand exactly what it will do and how it will affect them, I think it's unlikely that this will be the case.mad825 said:Erm, it's a almost certain if.Olas said:Then why would you care? Also, that's an unlikely if.What if I recognize that the update doesn't apply to me personally for whatever reason?
There are a lot of updates simply dedicated to fixing translations/symbols that you could set to make the world blow-up that a typical English speaking person wouldn't use. There are also updates fixes that related to hosting a server or a virtual PC.
Maybe early on in the development cycle it's going to vital however a year or 2 down the line it's going to be "why do I even need this?" kind of updates.
I'll give you an example from 2011 kb2534366 [https://support.microsoft.com/en-gb/kb/2534366]-"0xC000009A" error message when you try to install Windows 7 SP1 or Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 (more than 10 language packs installed) . I would like to mention that this was labelled as "important" and knowing someone who is trilingualed is a pretty rare thing.
Since I use a laptop, power outages don't really scare me, and I can always put my laptop into sleep mode if I want to save power. I've also never had windows (or at least windows 8) "crap out" on me the way you describe, at least that I can remember. I'm not saying it's not possible, but I just don't think it's a major concern, like... at all.MysticSlayer said:That's quite an awful work-around. It doesn't account for things going wrong, like potential power outages, and completely ignores any user that wants to keep their computer off when not using it (or just at night). It also assumes that Windows won't crap out and restart for some bizarre reason, which is something I've seen happen plenty of times, even while people are giving presentations.Olas said:Well, I guess you have to trust that Microsoft tests their updates before release. I won't deny that you have a point here, I guess you could always wait to restart your computer.What if I want to wait a day or two to see if any problems arise?
Keep using WindowsXP.MysticSlayer said:Also, what are people to do when they never want updates at all? Never turn off their computer?
I'm not a software engineer (yet) but I'm pretty sure it would be a nightmare for Microsoft if every user had a different set of updates installed. If you know exactly what everyone has, with no ambiguity, I imagine it would make troubleshooting problems easier by an order of magnitude. This is good for both Microsoft AND you.MysticSlayer said:And why would I take an update to something I'd never use? It isn't something I like to do. If I can't remove it, I'd rather it just sit buried, not getting touched. Why would I need any more reason than that? It's my computer, not yours. (Note: "yours" isn't referring to you personally, just people in general).Then why would you care?What if I recognize that the update doesn't apply to me personally for whatever reason?
MysticSlayer said:Unless I want to have control over what's going on to the computer. As I've hinted at above, that's reasonably important to me. Sure, there are times that I'm going to have software installed once I get the computer, but even then, I'm often looking for ways to remove what I can and keep off what I don't want. Again, my computer, not yours.That's what the control panel and personalization settings are for. You don't personalize your computer by selectively downloading updates.Microsoft may understand Windows better than almost anyone, but they do not understand everyone's personal needs better than those people do.
Edit: Fixed some quoting mistakes.
You can do exactly that, it's a upgrade not an reinstall, also why is you OS drive the same as your storage drive? WHAT FRESH MADNESS IS THIS!!!!!... sorry.mysecondlife said:Seems unlikely that I can still play Witcher 3 and Dark Souls on my PC without having to redownload if I upgrade.
So my response would be...
Oh... shit.
WUTEVER WUTEVER I DO WUTEVER I WUNT.Hoplon said:You can do exactly that, it's a upgrade not an reinstall, also why is you OS drive the same as your storage drive? WHAT FRESH MADNESS IS THIS!!!!!... sorry.mysecondlife said:Seems unlikely that I can still play Witcher 3 and Dark Souls on my PC without having to redownload if I upgrade.
So my response would be...
Oh... shit.
I was going to say that I've never had any problems accepting all the Windows 7 updates, but I hadn't considered bloatware. Which, if Windows 7 is any indication, will probably be minimal. But the fact that they're planning this Windows Store crap worries me a bit.Ekit said:I always install every new update, but I am VERY against mandatory updates. I think it opens a whole can of worms with ways to abuse the system by forcing bloatware and other shit on the user base.
Would there be anything stopping people from just disabling the update service? That's what I've been doing since XP, I disable all the services I don't need like windows updates, windows firewall, windows defender, security center (I don't need a fucking anti-virus installed), etc.MysticSlayer said:It isn't exactly 100% new that Windows 10 would force install updates for Home users [http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-win_upgrade/does-windows-update-force-install-of-optional/3b477ecc-e3c6-405c-bef8-7bdcc657b2bb] (so it won't affect Pro, Enterprise, and Education users), but it has also begun to come out that people won't be able to bypass this feature [http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/07/windows-10-updates-to-be-automatic-and-mandatory-for-home-users/]. You are able to control the restart, but that's about it. Now, this isn't exactly new for a desktop OS, as I'm pretty sure Chrome OS already does this, but that's a really minor player in the market. It certainly isn't on Windows's level.
I was just wondering what other people think of this. Most people I know probably wouldn't care about this so long as they can prevent an automatic restart, but I was wondering what other people's views on it were.
As far as I know, it's Microsoft's intention that it shouldn't be shut off. Whether or not that means it will be possible through some work-around is another matter.Phoenixmgs said:Would there be anything stopping people from just disabling the update service? That's what I've been doing since XP, I disable all the services I don't need like windows updates, windows firewall, windows defender, security center (I don't need a fucking anti-virus installed), etc.MysticSlayer said:It isn't exactly 100% new that Windows 10 would force install updates for Home users [http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_10-win_upgrade/does-windows-update-force-install-of-optional/3b477ecc-e3c6-405c-bef8-7bdcc657b2bb] (so it won't affect Pro, Enterprise, and Education users), but it has also begun to come out that people won't be able to bypass this feature [http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/07/windows-10-updates-to-be-automatic-and-mandatory-for-home-users/]. You are able to control the restart, but that's about it. Now, this isn't exactly new for a desktop OS, as I'm pretty sure Chrome OS already does this, but that's a really minor player in the market. It certainly isn't on Windows's level.
I was just wondering what other people think of this. Most people I know probably wouldn't care about this so long as they can prevent an automatic restart, but I was wondering what other people's views on it were.
Sorry, I mean to specify non-security updates. I can understand the logic in trying to force a security update. I'm just not sure why they had to lump non-security updates in with it.Olas said:Keep using WindowsXP.
The thing is, this doesn't affect certain versions of Windows 10, so it isn't like Microsoft isn't already dealing with potentially different update statuses.I'm not a software engineer (yet) but I'm pretty sure it would be a nightmare for Microsoft if every user had a different set of updates installed. If you know exactly what everyone has, with no ambiguity, I imagine it would make troubleshooting problems easier by an order of magnitude. This is good for both Microsoft AND you.
Sorry if I was coming across as..confrontational...? That wasn't my intention. The intention might just be getting lost because Internet.I'm not sure why you're so resistant to the idea of updates that have zero impact on you. My computer installed an update today when I turned it on, I barely even noticed it.
Well, now that you mention it...No, I'm not going there.What "control" do you want over your computer that you can't get through the control panel or options menu's?
It's Microsoft's intention that you don't turn off anything, use Internet Explorer, use Bing, etc. If Windows updates are a service like past Windows, then you can simply disable the service which is a pretty basic thing for most users.MysticSlayer said:As far as I know, it's Microsoft's intention that it shouldn't be shut off. Whether or not that means it will be possible through some work-around is another matter.Phoenixmgs said:Would there be anything stopping people from just disabling the update service? That's what I've been doing since XP, I disable all the services I don't need like windows updates, windows firewall, windows defender, security center (I don't need a fucking anti-virus installed), etc.
That said, as long as you stay away from the Home edition, then there should be a better level of control.
Then you got lucky, apache updates have a filthy habit of changing how config files are laid out. We had a fun one a while ago where we utterly lost a SLES box on reboot due to it nuking most of the file system. Fun times.KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:Also I've never had a Linux update break anything.