Friday, August 14, 2015

Windows 10, etc.

I downloaded Windows 10 and it took forrrrreeeeevvvvver. I don't know why exactly, but I can point to a couple of things as warnings for everyone else who will be doing this.

1) If you have a screen saver or auto-sleep mode set (these save power when nobody is using the PC for some time), turn them off (to "never") until you're done with the d/l. When they go into effect the download isn't recognized as activity which should keep the machine 'awake'. Apparently the only things they recognize are user-inputs like mouse, keyboard or other user devices. A running program to Microsoft is not 'activity'. This happened to me several times before I wised-up. Lots of wasted time and money there with no error message or warnings. When my machine went to "sleep" it stopped net activity and that led to the net going "dormant" and that meant no connection, so the Win10 download was stopped! I had tried to let it go all night, but apparently it stopped in about an hour and in the morning there was nothing to show for it. There is no pause (and resume later) for this download.

2) Make sure you have a secure internet connection for the entire download. I started with less than 3 GB and in the middle of the download had to load my Virgin Mobile account with some money and then apply that to get more 'data' for the next month. Then something truly horrible happened (apparently), I had to reboot and that destroyed my download. Yep. It all went away. All the time spent, all the internet connection money, gone. I had to start over. Similarly, if your internet connection dries up the downloader program (Windows Update I suppose) will stop and you probably lose it all.

After downloading it the set-up took a very long time. I went and had dinner and when I came back to look it was still working. It reboots your computer several times in the process. It's not hard to tell when it's done though. There is a good on-screen message showing how far along the process is and when it's done.

One note about the installation: consider this very personal question carefully, do you want a Custom or Express install? An Express installation lets Microsoft grab a lot of information from your PC for their commercial purposes, but a Custom installation lets you decide if you don't want some things and doesn't take long to go through. I suggest Custom, so you can tell Microsoft you don't want to give them anything about your personal life (as recorded on your PC).

So, now I have Win10 and it's not too bad. I just lost my internet connection and printer and have a bunch of metro "live" tiles on my start menu.

1) The default printer became the MS printer-to-PDF (as I recall), so the driver (it may be on your PC, but probably since it's a new OS it's to be found on the MicroSoft site or on the manufacturer's site where you originally found it) for your real printing device has to be re-found (just update the driver). Then, to use the printer properly it has to be set to DEFAULT. I actually did this several times with no effect, but somehow managed to get it to stick. I'm still not sure precisely where or how I did it when it really took effect. I suppose the advice is: just KEEP AT IT until it sticks.

2) OTOH, my wireless internet connection was well and truly killed. I talked to Virgin Mobile help-desk people and they told me the dongle I used to get wireless internet (like a cell phone contacting a cell tower) was simply incompatible with Win10. Darn. So, how much for a new one that will work? They don't have one. They suggest only one product (which I bought). It's the NetGear Mingle hotspot for Virgin Mobile (a wireless access point for everyone in the neighborhood to try hacking into). I bought it at Best Buy (they're great) for about $50 and, like most electronics, it's small and seems fragile. Well, so does my HP PC, so that's not unusual. If I take care of my stuff it should be alright. In this case my PC has no built-in wireless capability, so I feel somewhat lucky the Mingle has a cable which attaches it via mini-USB (on the Mingle) and USB (on my PC) to receive electrical power and, naturally, to let me use it via the wire. This makes it pretty much the same as a dongle except that it's also broadcasting to the neighborhood (though it does have a account & password security). I'd prefer to turn that off altogether and not broadcast the SSID.

Okay, so I fiddled with it and somehow turned it off, disabled it or something. It took a few tries for me to figure out how to use it. Calling Virgin Mobile is helpful if you need it.

The first thing that's neat is that it gets charged by the PC and can remain on and going even when my browser is off. Yeah, the neighborhood can see it even when I'm logged-off.

Second, with the auto settings it can be powered on and off automagically when my PC boots up or shuts down -- that's handy. I don't have to turn it on & off!

When it's off and you try to get it started there's one important trick. It doesn't have the IP address of the VM site, so you have to type in the IP address for your browser (it's in the instruction booklet). However, after it gets going you could just use the standard http:// address to get there. I must have fiddled with it for several hours before I figured that out.

They weren't kidding when they called the WWW the World-Wide Waste-of-time. You can waste a LOT of time watching Win10 download or fiddling with novel gadgets which almost work intuitively, but not quite.

Now when I start the browser it logs-in to the Mingle home page, I 'connect' and open a new tab to use the net. It provides pretty good speed (about 3.1Gbps). Previously I was supposedly getting 4G speed (about 8-100Mbps), but was really only getting about 4-5Gbps max. So, the speed now is good, but noticeably slower when I'm trying to load a webpage with a lot of graphics/pics or perhaps get my e-mail from Google GMail. But, with Google I don't know if the problem is with my Mingle or them -- they are often slow because they serve so many customers.

In conclusion:

Am I satisfied? So far it's been pretty good. There are some nifty things others might use more than me (Cortana, live tiles, snapping apps, the Edge browser, etc.) but I guess all the things I liked about Win7 are still there and quite usable. Will I "live happily ever after" with Win10? We'll see.

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PRIVACY UPDATE:

Microsoft has said their search box on the taskbar sends some information back to the home base. How much information it's sending isn't quite known. You can remove this search box from the taskbar, but if you right-click on 'Start' it will still be in the list (if you must use it). Another detail not known is whether local searches of your PC (not the net) return information to MS when next you logon to the Internet.

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