F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems The Windows 10 update is starting automatically without your consent.

The Windows 10 update is starting automatically without your consent.

The Windows 10 update is starting automatically without your consent.

Pages (2): Previous 1 2
E
ergaon18
Junior Member
29
03-25-2016, 08:19 AM
#11
Add to Desktop: stop windows update.bat
Create Shortcut: Stop Windows Update to Startup Folder
E
ergaon18
03-25-2016, 08:19 AM #11

Add to Desktop: stop windows update.bat
Create Shortcut: Stop Windows Update to Startup Folder

3
3gilad3
Senior Member
735
03-30-2016, 11:15 AM
#12
In fact, you're not the first. Only those who join the insider program come first.
3
3gilad3
03-30-2016, 11:15 AM #12

In fact, you're not the first. Only those who join the insider program come first.

L
lets_miklas
Member
163
03-30-2016, 03:39 PM
#13
They miss many issues that come with broader rollouts. I acknowledge my scenario is limited, but I feel overlooked by MS for Win10. Win8 and earlier lacked this restriction. I can't tolerate PCs restarting on their own if left unattended. I won’t upgrade to Pro just for extra control options. I don’t want automatic login attempts to resume, since they’re often unreliable. Running it as a service isn’t feasible for me. Linux isn’t ideal either. Even without reboots, background updates hurt performance. I still like the Win7 setup I have—turn off auto-updates. Check and install once a month, reboot, done. Much less hassle and stress. I’m back in favor of Windows 2000, especially those older versions before major service updates.
L
lets_miklas
03-30-2016, 03:39 PM #13

They miss many issues that come with broader rollouts. I acknowledge my scenario is limited, but I feel overlooked by MS for Win10. Win8 and earlier lacked this restriction. I can't tolerate PCs restarting on their own if left unattended. I won’t upgrade to Pro just for extra control options. I don’t want automatic login attempts to resume, since they’re often unreliable. Running it as a service isn’t feasible for me. Linux isn’t ideal either. Even without reboots, background updates hurt performance. I still like the Win7 setup I have—turn off auto-updates. Check and install once a month, reboot, done. Much less hassle and stress. I’m back in favor of Windows 2000, especially those older versions before major service updates.

R
RewarPlaysYT
Member
63
03-30-2016, 04:32 PM
#14
Alright, I'll just revise it and try not to get anything too serious.
R
RewarPlaysYT
03-30-2016, 04:32 PM #14

Alright, I'll just revise it and try not to get anything too serious.

Y
yousif12
Junior Member
11
03-30-2016, 10:40 PM
#15
Adjust your Windows configuration to fit your requirements. Set up maintenance times as needed. Access the Windows 7 panel, navigate to Maintenance, and click the blue "Change maintenance settings" link. Once configured, the OS will handle tasks automatically without further intervention.
Y
yousif12
03-30-2016, 10:40 PM #15

Adjust your Windows configuration to fit your requirements. Set up maintenance times as needed. Access the Windows 7 panel, navigate to Maintenance, and click the blue "Change maintenance settings" link. Once configured, the OS will handle tasks automatically without further intervention.

C
CougillM
Member
162
03-31-2016, 09:22 AM
#16
If you agree... honestly, I feel the same way too. It’s frustrating not getting updates installed and then panicking when things go wrong. We talked to those types before, laughed it off, and kept moving forward.
C
CougillM
03-31-2016, 09:22 AM #16

If you agree... honestly, I feel the same way too. It’s frustrating not getting updates installed and then panicking when things go wrong. We talked to those types before, laughed it off, and kept moving forward.

Pages (2): Previous 1 2