F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems What a surprise!

What a surprise!

What a surprise!

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EpicSword55
Member
213
12-18-2016, 03:28 PM
#1
It's GeForce Experience, right? Plus, it seems the system ran Windows 8.1 with Nvidia drivers, which caused some odd cursor behavior. I fixed it and everything worked perfectly. No issues here—just smooth performance. What do you mean by 'waiting'? Sounds like an excuse. Maybe you're not following the insider updates. Windows 10 is now officially closed for beta! Congratulations to Microsoft on another OS release!
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EpicSword55
12-18-2016, 03:28 PM #1

It's GeForce Experience, right? Plus, it seems the system ran Windows 8.1 with Nvidia drivers, which caused some odd cursor behavior. I fixed it and everything worked perfectly. No issues here—just smooth performance. What do you mean by 'waiting'? Sounds like an excuse. Maybe you're not following the insider updates. Windows 10 is now officially closed for beta! Congratulations to Microsoft on another OS release!

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GamerDania
Member
123
12-20-2016, 12:31 AM
#2
Sure, I'm here to help! What can I do for you?
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GamerDania
12-20-2016, 12:31 AM #2

Sure, I'm here to help! What can I do for you?

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explosive_pie
Junior Member
8
12-20-2016, 02:04 AM
#3
The drivers for Windows 8.1 might be the best match Microsoft found for Windows 10. Although there are Windows 10 drivers out there, Microsoft hasn’t included them in the update yet or might not approve them.
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explosive_pie
12-20-2016, 02:04 AM #3

The drivers for Windows 8.1 might be the best match Microsoft found for Windows 10. Although there are Windows 10 drivers out there, Microsoft hasn’t included them in the update yet or might not approve them.

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SkylanderAlex
Member
207
12-20-2016, 03:07 AM
#4
I was an early adopter who set it up a long time ago after the first tech preview... it became my go-to in January, but drivers were terrible, games would crash and freeze, then just hang. Things got much worse a few months back. Windows is nearing release, so it's not an excuse—we're too lazy to avoid it. I've tried it and understand why I switched back for my PC. This is right before launch, so it should improve soon.
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SkylanderAlex
12-20-2016, 03:07 AM #4

I was an early adopter who set it up a long time ago after the first tech preview... it became my go-to in January, but drivers were terrible, games would crash and freeze, then just hang. Things got much worse a few months back. Windows is nearing release, so it's not an excuse—we're too lazy to avoid it. I've tried it and understand why I switched back for my PC. This is right before launch, so it should improve soon.

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63
12-20-2016, 04:24 AM
#5
kden
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thedempseys2_0
12-20-2016, 04:24 AM #5

kden

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Lil_Shorty
Member
202
12-25-2016, 07:41 PM
#6
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Lil_Shorty
12-25-2016, 07:41 PM #6

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bmarzano
Senior Member
449
12-26-2016, 12:08 AM
#7
Certainly, many individuals hesitate to make changes at this moment since they believe the system remains riddled with issues.
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bmarzano
12-26-2016, 12:08 AM #7

Certainly, many individuals hesitate to make changes at this moment since they believe the system remains riddled with issues.

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xTripleMinerx
Posting Freak
846
12-27-2016, 11:32 AM
#8
I wanted to let you know about this. If you didn’t like it, no worries. I had to remove system32 to achieve this.
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xTripleMinerx
12-27-2016, 11:32 AM #8

I wanted to let you know about this. If you didn’t like it, no worries. I had to remove system32 to achieve this.

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103
12-27-2016, 12:44 PM
#9
byalexandr, The primary reason to wait is a common practice from the IT industry. Program compatibility, system bugs, massive zero-day exploits all traditionally happen in the first few months of any OS release. This is also a first for Microsoft having such a large and open beta which may help alleviate those issues, but I'm sure they will happen just like with any OS release and taking the time to ensure stability especially for a system that may be the income producer for a lot of individuals is not a bad thing. Hope this helps. Edit: I've included some links to past OS releases. It may be being overly cautious for Windows 10 but history seems to repeat quite regularly.
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Autobotforever
12-27-2016, 12:44 PM #9

byalexandr, The primary reason to wait is a common practice from the IT industry. Program compatibility, system bugs, massive zero-day exploits all traditionally happen in the first few months of any OS release. This is also a first for Microsoft having such a large and open beta which may help alleviate those issues, but I'm sure they will happen just like with any OS release and taking the time to ensure stability especially for a system that may be the income producer for a lot of individuals is not a bad thing. Hope this helps. Edit: I've included some links to past OS releases. It may be being overly cautious for Windows 10 but history seems to repeat quite regularly.

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MiningMo15
Junior Member
13
12-27-2016, 07:49 PM
#10
Program compatibility seems likely to be a challenge, as anticipated. While the experience is smooth for me, many users across different devices will face similar issues. It's unclear if launch day exploits exist, but we'll have to monitor updates. Helping with beta testing was a positive experience—this software is top-notch and Microsoft has been working hard.
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MiningMo15
12-27-2016, 07:49 PM #10

Program compatibility seems likely to be a challenge, as anticipated. While the experience is smooth for me, many users across different devices will face similar issues. It's unclear if launch day exploits exist, but we'll have to monitor updates. Helping with beta testing was a positive experience—this software is top-notch and Microsoft has been working hard.

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