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How am I wrong about why I make my own comments? I'm sorry, you know me better than I do. /sarcasm
Win10 does have issues. Never stated that it doesn't. I was rather clear about what I stated in my comments.
You keep changing your reasoning. First, it was because of compatibility, next was about telemetry, and now you are ranting on about something else... because you just seem to want to deviate away from the original comment that was solely about game compatibility.
I get it, you don't like Win10. Cool. Still doesn't have much to do with game compatibility and the fact that virtually anything will work, with or without a workaround.
You say it is about impossible to get away from Android, yet you seem to not understand that this very reason makes what Win10 does look like child's play in comparison. I find it funny that you think you are being a rebel against big corporations. That'll teach them, eh? lol
No its not required; you can disable all the data collection and have the OS function fully and normally, just like Win7/8
Use ShutUp10 to make this an easy process.
Didn't say I was a rebel, I simply said it acts as a middle finger to them.
I didn't say the OS wouldn't function, I said it can cause problems and has caused problems. I've had customers who have come to me after using programs like that because it blocks web addresses that Win10 may need to use at some point or disables services that Win10 or another program may need to run. And again, updates can re-enable these services anyways so even though you may have used it 6 months ago a ton of those services may be enabled again and with most of these tools, Windows Update is disabled out right and if you can't get it running again by simply starting the service and checking the registry then Win10 may need to run the Repair option.
I've had my fair share of customers and friends bringing their machines to me after using those apps, Shutup10, DWS, Spybot Anti-Beacon, etc. and like I said, a lot of times they do more harm than good. If you want much less telemetry you can buy/upgrade to an Enterprise copy of Win10.
Using ShutUp10 wont mess up anything in how the OS functions; unless you go disabling things like Windows Updates. Pretty much everything else in that listing can be disabled without breaking anything. Anti-Beacon is not needed if you using ShutUp10; and Anti-Beacon can't hurt anything either; it block non essential crap-ware in the OS that shares data.
Its that simple. If they broke their OS, they did something and did it wrong.
You don't need to purchase Win10 either, for like the millionth time on this forum. It's public knowledge.
You can read up on many forum threads stating how Shutup10 causes OS problems. It is not a bullet proof solution.
I personally have probably 10 or so keys for Windows 10 so I'd never need to buy it but you can't get Win10 Enterprise for free unless you use a janky method which leaves it un-registered and at any point an un-registered copy of Windows 10 could be rendered useless if Microsoft feels like it. Not a risk I'd be willing to take.
If you do disable something like Windows Updates through ShutUp10; to re-enable it simply re-run the app and turn it back on, close ShutUp10, it asks to create restore point, click yes. Reboot the OS in order for the change(s) to then be applied. It's really that simple. The restore point is just a safety guard for that particular reboot process after applying a change; after the OS reboots properly you won't need those restore points; wipe them out and then create a new fresh restore point of your own. Since its really dumb to keep MANY of them in any machine when the OS is working perfectly fine. Since going too far back in time can actually break things.
And if you use ShutUp10; u dont need other similar tools; like Anti-Beacon.
Anti-Beacon is more limited and deals with things like Telemetry and alike.
ShutUp10 handles everything Anti-Beacon handles; plus MUCH more.
I agree, too many backups is bad and too old of a backup can cause some major issues. I remember when Windows XP allowed you to use a restore point from before you had a Service Pack installed and it never ended well.
And we use it on hundreds of PCs. Even the people who buy PCs from us tend to use it; cause it makes managing these settings in Win10 Home easier. Unless you want to install Win10 Pro and just not use a key, unless you want to pay for a key.
I typically just install Win10 Pro and be done with it, no reason to install Home if you ask me.
But again, you really shouldn't need restore points anyways. Its never been a reliable feature and sometimes its broken depending upon many factors; what got changed, when it got changed, etc. Many factor combinations could break a restore point.
Many folks are not taking care of system cleanups though either and defragging their HDD; if the OS is on a HDD and not an SSD. And after a while, the whole system just gets into a problem state, cause the user never did things to take care of it.
Yeah, I personally don't know why they decided on a Win10 Home version ever existing. All my copies of Win10 are Win10 Pro and I never recommend anyone install anything less than Win7/8.1/10 Pro.
Yep, restore points rarely actually work due to some really stupid issues, even something basic like a USB device being introduced after a restore point was made when trying to go back can cause issues. I usually use something like CloneZilla if I need to backup a drive to be sure though I keep all my important data backed up anyways.
I don't personally usually do disk defrags in general unless a customer pushes for it, I've ran disk tests before and after and almost nothing changes. I do usually run a sector test here and there if there's reason to believe the drive might be damaged from improper use or physical handling.