Crashnburn
Pattern Altitude
I’m not an early technology adopter because if any piece of technology has an issue, it will for me me. I delayed moving to Windows 10 from Windows 7 as long as I could, but Micro$oft stopped supporting Win 7 in January and more C drive file system and as FUBAR.
I believe in backups and data redundancy so I used a 2 TB 7200 RPM HDD with an internal 8 GB SSD cache I had left over from an experiment instead of the Windows 7 SSD.
Some Observations.
Windows 10 boots slower from the HDD than Windows 7 from the SSD, as expected.
Windows 10 doesn’t let you use Gadgets; they can be a security hole, so no surprise.
I’m glad I didn’t use the Win 7 SSD for Windows 10 as I could only find the HP Office Jet MFP driver installer on that drive, as HP now gives you the driver, but no installer. What’s up with that?
If you’re using Windows 7, that printer allows you to scan documents to a network folder, but as far as I can tell, Windows 10 doesn’t.
I hate OneDrive! I finally went to Programs And Features and deleted it.
At some addressing depth, Windows 10 displays an aliased path to files and folders but you need the real path to navigate.
I have an old HP Pavilion that started out as a Vista computer that I eventually upgraded to Windows 7. Later I added a Western Digital 32GB SSD cache to it and really sped it up. I’m going to try to pull that SSD out to add it to my current computer and install the caching software. I expect the most recent 8 GB of data in that cache will also be in the HDD’s cache.
One other thing. Updates are a lot less painful than Windows 7 were.
I believe in backups and data redundancy so I used a 2 TB 7200 RPM HDD with an internal 8 GB SSD cache I had left over from an experiment instead of the Windows 7 SSD.
Some Observations.
Windows 10 boots slower from the HDD than Windows 7 from the SSD, as expected.
Windows 10 doesn’t let you use Gadgets; they can be a security hole, so no surprise.
I’m glad I didn’t use the Win 7 SSD for Windows 10 as I could only find the HP Office Jet MFP driver installer on that drive, as HP now gives you the driver, but no installer. What’s up with that?
If you’re using Windows 7, that printer allows you to scan documents to a network folder, but as far as I can tell, Windows 10 doesn’t.
I hate OneDrive! I finally went to Programs And Features and deleted it.
At some addressing depth, Windows 10 displays an aliased path to files and folders but you need the real path to navigate.
I have an old HP Pavilion that started out as a Vista computer that I eventually upgraded to Windows 7. Later I added a Western Digital 32GB SSD cache to it and really sped it up. I’m going to try to pull that SSD out to add it to my current computer and install the caching software. I expect the most recent 8 GB of data in that cache will also be in the HDD’s cache.
One other thing. Updates are a lot less painful than Windows 7 were.
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