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There's a free program out there called GWX Control Panel. (I won't make a link 'cos it's dead easy to Google...)
That will get rid of all the W10 files hidden on your computer. It worked like a charm for me!
If Win XP was still supported, I'd still be using it (went from there to 8.1, did not pass "Go", didn't receive $200)
but you're talking to a guy that still has Winamp as default MP3 player
"There's nothing taking away from the pure masculinity I possess"
I did the Windows 10 upgrade at home last night and I'm really loving it so far. Here's a tip: if you decide to upgrade, don't do the "online" method because it takes forever. Instead, go here and get the ISO:
Then you can burn the ISO to a DVD, run setup.exe, and it'll go much faster. This ISO is the same as the free upgrade, so you can use it on as many PC's as you like until the free upgrade period is over. I only needed to do it on one, but it still was a much better way to go.
The reason some are being upgraded is because you previously installed updates that allowed it to run 10.
I manually do the updates, so now I don't have to worry about having it forced on me. I don't even have the 'nag' box.
You can uninstall them to get rid of that stuff.
As to Windows 10.
My mother bought a computer ''off of the QVC'' and had me set it up for her.
After a week, I had her return it. Windows 10, for me, was not the issue. The hardware was the issue. But Windows 10, while having new stuff to deal with, was not all that different, in terms of using it, from the previous versions that we have all come to love so much.
Love Windows 10 and have it on all my PCs now.
That said, if you don't want it, policy the fucker out.
This is what we did to all of our work computers.
Click Computer Configuration.
Click Policies.
Click Administrative Templates.
Click Windows Components.
Click Windows Update.
Double-click Turn off the upgrade to the latest version of Windows through Windows Update.
I've had Windows 10 for a few months at work, but I hesitated to upgrade at home because my PC is slightly older and the motherboard can only handle a max of 4GB of RAM. So I assumed that Windows 10 would slow it down, since each new version has traditionally been more bloated than the last and used up more resources. I was wrong. This one definitely performs better than before the upgrade (from Windows 7). But since the upgrade is, in a sense, a reload, that's probably the reason. It cleared some of the clutter and gave me a fresher registry.
Thanks PT. I have a 5 year old ASUS laptop that has always run like a dog with Win 7 even though there was barely anything saved on it let alone, power hungry programs. Tried the "online" way and after 2 hours, it still hadn't even started to download....as far as I could tell!
I did the 10 upgrade on my Win7 laptop a few months ago. It did take a while but once I got it up and running and changed a few settings I like it. My wife had 8.1 on her laptop and I hated it big time.
My Toys:
'94 Dinky Rev. Purple Burst Flame Top
'94 Dinky Rev. Cherry Burst Flame Top
'94 Dinky Rev. Purple Burst Quilt Top
'94 Dinky HX in Black
'12 ESP Mii NTB in Black
If you're running 7 or 8 and don't want to upgrade to 10... you need to run this Aegis script. It removes all the telemetry, hosts and update patches so you won't get hit with the W10 nag. I'd suggest turning off updates completely. If you want to check for updates, go ahead and update first, then run the Aegis script and then turn off updates.
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