![Rolling Eyes :roll:](./images/smilies/icon_rolleyes.gif)
I will upgrade 2 more of my PC's this weekend. One from 8.1pro and another from W7. Those will be the last i had running on older OS. Except for one. But i will leave the old dual boot on that one.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
I already tried that and it did nothing, so it tells me it must be something in Windows 10 that must have been corrupted somehow.MadManCK wrote:You can also try to run in W8 compatibility mode.
Officially, Microsoft hasn't announced a release date for this summer's Anniversary Update to Windows 10. But the safe bet is Friday, July 29, one year to the day after the original release of Windows 10.
At its annual Build developers conference in San Francisco last month, executives on the Windows team showed off features due for the summer update, previously code-named Redstone. With the release of build 14328 last Friday, members of the Windows Insider program can finally get their hands on some of those new additions.
By my count, this is at least the ninth public release of a Windows 10 build in the 14xxx series for PCs since late January, and it is by far the most feature rich. The list of changes in the new build is substantial, with a handful of new features that are tailor-made for new Windows 10 devices like Microsoft's Surface Pro 4 and Surface Book.
The new Start experience (don't call it a Start menu, please) is the most obvious change. The latest Start redesign adds a scrolling, alphabetical All Apps list, shrinking the Power, Settings, and pinned folders icons to a thin bar on the left. The result requires fewer clicks on the controversial hamburger menu to get tasks accomplished.