![]() If you have Windows 10 Pro, you can bypass the forced update to Win10 Anniversary Update by clicking Start > Settings > Update & recovery > Advanced Options and check the box marked Defer upgrades. If you’re on a Wi-Fi connection, you can use the metered connection trick to keep the Anniversary Update off your machine. If that’s the case, you can proactively try to block the update for now. With the update rolling out slowly, there’s a good chance it hasn’t yet tried to install itself on your machine. To resolve this issue, you will need to uninstall the existing Brother software and then reinstall it. If you are not using Win10, this notice does not pertain to you. The next major update to Windows 10 is scheduled to be released on August 2nd, 2016. After your Windows 10 PC has been updated, either automatically or by manually updating through Windows Updates, you may no longer be able to print or scan using the USB and Network connections. This notice is for customers using Win10 OS. For example, Brother Corp just sent a reassuring email to all their customers that says: The list of broken drivers goes on and on. Long-time Windows user, really had enough. Can't stop these updates and I guess can't expect your PC will be like before they updated. No respect for the individual user anymore. Well, I just got to move past Windows I guess. But still, so much for customizing your PC anymore. Just great, all the tiles are live again, back to annoying notifications, default icons Edge, and Store back on taskbar which is not such a big deal. Poster jescott418 on the same Microsoft Answers thread adds this: To recreate your virtual desktops, click the Task View icon on your taskbar and select Add New Desktop. To personalize, go to Settings > System > Tablet Mode. Notification settings. To personalize, go to Settings > System > Notifications & actions > Notifications.Pen Settings. To personalize your pen settings, go to Settings > Devices > Pen & Windows Ink.The officially recognized changes include: How convenient to have that change of heart.Īdding insult to ignominy, the Anniversary Update is changing all sorts of settings. “Microsoft can now recover anywhere between 3 and 5GB of storage space on the users device that would normally be occupied by the previous operating system files that were saved for a possible rollback recovery.” That’s a decent argument now, but somebody should’ve told Microsoft last year when they silently pushed 3GB to 6GB of unwanted data onto Windows 7 and 8.1 computers as part of the “Get Windows 10” effort. Richard Hay reported yesterday on Windows Supersite that Microsoft has just - unilaterally, and without notification to anyone - changed the rules, so rollbacks can only be performed for 10 days after the initial installation. For those of you who aren’t in the beta test program, that means rolling back to the Fall Update, build 1511.īut there’s yet another problem with rollbacks. Several of the reported problems disappear if you roll back to the previous version of Windows - for those in the Insider program, that means going back to build 14393.0 (or possibly. It looks like System Restore gets turned off when you install the Anniversary Update. ![]() We don’t even have official acknowledgment that the problem exists. There are many different solutions proposed, but nothing official from Microsoft. Redditor KuruQan found out that running a clean install fixes the problem. There are more credible reports about Win10 locking up completely after the Anniversary Update. It’s still too early to tell exactly how that’ll work, but the “Available updates will be downloaded and installed automatically” notice appearing in the Settings app does not inspire confidence. While the gpedit setting for Configure Automatic Updates is still there, changing the setting there has no effect in the Win10 user interface (Start > Settings > Update & security > Update settings). I’ve seen a report on that the Anniversary Update makes the entire Group Policy setting for Configure Automatic Updates useless. It’s easy to accidentally reformat the drive. The newest version of Win10 refuses to see some drives, identifying them as RAW, and prompting for an NTFS reformat. There are very credible reports that the Anniversary Update is making entire volumes/drives invisible, prompting a reformat. Mauro Huculak at Windows Central has a different list of problems that have occurred - problems connecting to the Microsoft servers, driver incompatibilities, insufficient storage errors, damaged installation files, and more.Īnd, of course, we finally found out how to fix Cortana if he/she/it gets zapped in the course of the update.
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