- Sep 23, 2014
- 18
- 0
- 0
Hello,
I love Windows 10 for many reasons, but I hate it for at least one: automatic updates.
How could they possibly implement such a dumb feature?
It happened to me today: I boot my computer, start browsing with Edge, then suddenly everything freezes. The computer is almost fully unresponsive, Edge hangs and the drive access LED on the front panel of the computer is constantly ON. Then after more than 5 minutes the computer becomes finally responsive, just in time to "inform" me that the system will, by its own will, restart in about 10 minutes. There is only an "OK" button to the message box, because anyway I cannot cancel or even delay the reboot. At the said time, neglecting anything I'm currently doing and forcing all programs to close abruptly, the computer does indeed reboot to install updates. After 10 additional minutes, I can finally use my computer again. In total, it took me about 25min to be able to really use my computer. This is simply UNACCEPTABLE. No patch for whatever security flaw can ever, ever justify this behavior.
I've had PCs for years, never got into any trouble with any virus or anything. I know how a computer works. I apply updates when I'm shutting down the computer after my work is finished. I'm glad if the computer informs me when updates are available, but that's it! My actions should always have the utmost priority over anything the computer is doing in the background.
The same goes for mobile: automatic updates of apps could be acceptable when the phone is idle. But they should immediately pause or go to ultra low processor usage whenever you, as the user, is commanding an action on the device. If I am checking a map, sending a text or updating my calendar, this is the number one priority.
I cannot understand that anyone could design a system giving more importance to a Candy Crush update, than responding to user input. However this is exactly what Windows 10 is doing on all platforms: automatic background tasks are given top priority for disk and processor usage.
Am I the only one?
BR
I love Windows 10 for many reasons, but I hate it for at least one: automatic updates.
How could they possibly implement such a dumb feature?
It happened to me today: I boot my computer, start browsing with Edge, then suddenly everything freezes. The computer is almost fully unresponsive, Edge hangs and the drive access LED on the front panel of the computer is constantly ON. Then after more than 5 minutes the computer becomes finally responsive, just in time to "inform" me that the system will, by its own will, restart in about 10 minutes. There is only an "OK" button to the message box, because anyway I cannot cancel or even delay the reboot. At the said time, neglecting anything I'm currently doing and forcing all programs to close abruptly, the computer does indeed reboot to install updates. After 10 additional minutes, I can finally use my computer again. In total, it took me about 25min to be able to really use my computer. This is simply UNACCEPTABLE. No patch for whatever security flaw can ever, ever justify this behavior.
I've had PCs for years, never got into any trouble with any virus or anything. I know how a computer works. I apply updates when I'm shutting down the computer after my work is finished. I'm glad if the computer informs me when updates are available, but that's it! My actions should always have the utmost priority over anything the computer is doing in the background.
The same goes for mobile: automatic updates of apps could be acceptable when the phone is idle. But they should immediately pause or go to ultra low processor usage whenever you, as the user, is commanding an action on the device. If I am checking a map, sending a text or updating my calendar, this is the number one priority.
I cannot understand that anyone could design a system giving more importance to a Candy Crush update, than responding to user input. However this is exactly what Windows 10 is doing on all platforms: automatic background tasks are given top priority for disk and processor usage.
Am I the only one?
BR