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Windows 10 1903 on older system

Windows 10 1903 on older system

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Feugoflare961
Junior Member
12
01-23-2016, 08:49 AM
#1
Is it secure? I’m using an I5 3570K with 16 GB of Corsair RAM on a Gigabyte HD7950 motherboard. My Seagate HDD is 500 GB, and I’ve faced several problems with Windows 10 since its launch. Over time, some issues have been resolved through updates and patches. Occasionally, my network card stops functioning after a power cycle, but restarting usually resolves the problem. I also experience a mouse cursor distortion that briefly appears and then disappears on its own. Recently, I updated my network drivers to the newest versions from Intel, but I’m unsure if that will prevent future complications. I’m thinking about a complete system reset using Windows 1903, as I’ve had trouble updating with newer creator releases. My Haswell laptop works fine except for occasional disk space concerns, which I’ve addressed with a clean install. My current setup is running smoothly, but I’m weighing the risks of updates versus a fresh installation.
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Feugoflare961
01-23-2016, 08:49 AM #1

Is it secure? I’m using an I5 3570K with 16 GB of Corsair RAM on a Gigabyte HD7950 motherboard. My Seagate HDD is 500 GB, and I’ve faced several problems with Windows 10 since its launch. Over time, some issues have been resolved through updates and patches. Occasionally, my network card stops functioning after a power cycle, but restarting usually resolves the problem. I also experience a mouse cursor distortion that briefly appears and then disappears on its own. Recently, I updated my network drivers to the newest versions from Intel, but I’m unsure if that will prevent future complications. I’m thinking about a complete system reset using Windows 1903, as I’ve had trouble updating with newer creator releases. My Haswell laptop works fine except for occasional disk space concerns, which I’ve addressed with a clean install. My current setup is running smoothly, but I’m weighing the risks of updates versus a fresh installation.

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banshee45
Senior Member
726
01-23-2016, 11:30 AM
#2
I'm running the same motherboard and CPU, no problems on 1903. Perform a fresh installation.
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banshee45
01-23-2016, 11:30 AM #2

I'm running the same motherboard and CPU, no problems on 1903. Perform a fresh installation.

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bananaWILD
Junior Member
9
01-27-2016, 12:04 PM
#3
Have you considered turning off powersaving on the NIC? Your setup is similar but uses a different system with the same CPU. I haven’t encountered any new problems on 1903, and it appears to have resolved the issue with auxiliary monitors failing after sleep or hibernation.
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bananaWILD
01-27-2016, 12:04 PM #3

Have you considered turning off powersaving on the NIC? Your setup is similar but uses a different system with the same CPU. I haven’t encountered any new problems on 1903, and it appears to have resolved the issue with auxiliary monitors failing after sleep or hibernation.

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xXEzokxXx
Member
53
01-27-2016, 03:33 PM
#4
I verified the status and confirmed no power-saving feature is active. The problem seems intermittent, occurring roughly once every ten times. I’ll need to back up data and plan a reinstall for next weekend.
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xXEzokxXx
01-27-2016, 03:33 PM #4

I verified the status and confirmed no power-saving feature is active. The problem seems intermittent, occurring roughly once every ten times. I’ll need to back up data and plan a reinstall for next weekend.

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DarkTitanPT
Member
162
01-27-2016, 09:48 PM
#5
This bothers me about Windows 10 because I feel like it needs to be treated the same as Windows 98—regular reinstallations every year. The constant updates from the developers really drove me crazy, unlike XP or Windows 7 where upgrades were smoother.
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DarkTitanPT
01-27-2016, 09:48 PM #5

This bothers me about Windows 10 because I feel like it needs to be treated the same as Windows 98—regular reinstallations every year. The constant updates from the developers really drove me crazy, unlike XP or Windows 7 where upgrades were smoother.

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ChainChompz
Member
187
01-28-2016, 01:41 AM
#6
They're not just updating the system, they're essentially rebuilding it from scratch. But they also do a manual reinstall? That's great. My setup runs perfectly after all the updates without needing another install.
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ChainChompz
01-28-2016, 01:41 AM #6

They're not just updating the system, they're essentially rebuilding it from scratch. But they also do a manual reinstall? That's great. My setup runs perfectly after all the updates without needing another install.

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kungfutyla
Posting Freak
780
01-28-2016, 10:35 AM
#7
Other creators' updates forced me to reinstall completely since they risked breaking my system. That’s why I think Windows 10 is terrible. If Apple didn’t have so many quality control problems, I’d likely stick with a Mac now.
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kungfutyla
01-28-2016, 10:35 AM #7

Other creators' updates forced me to reinstall completely since they risked breaking my system. That’s why I think Windows 10 is terrible. If Apple didn’t have so many quality control problems, I’d likely stick with a Mac now.

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raroman07
Member
107
01-28-2016, 10:42 AM
#8
I replaced around 12 machines from 1809/1803 to 1903 with no issues so far, though I might just be lucky. Earlier upgrades also worked well without any failures—except for bugs from 1809, where a clean install didn’t fix them.
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raroman07
01-28-2016, 10:42 AM #8

I replaced around 12 machines from 1809/1803 to 1903 with no issues so far, though I might just be lucky. Earlier upgrades also worked well without any failures—except for bugs from 1809, where a clean install didn’t fix them.