Here's the Forbes article
One of the discussed causes (discussed does not mean verified, but what can you do) is incompatibility with some of the major anti-virus programs. ESET actually had a warning about issues with the update. My solution was I did not install Eset on this latest OS installation (I installed OS about four times before everything began to work correctly).
I am writing on a brand new build that had a number of instability issues. Maybe some were 1903. I didn't have any choice. If you're building now and install Win 10, you're going to get 1903. I went so far as to buy a Win 8.1 key, since Win 8.1 was the most stable system I've owned, much better than Win XP.
But for now I'm on Win 10. On this my latest installation I disconnected completely from the net during the installation process and have systematically said no to windows' efforts to get me to connect to an on-line account and also thwarted some "features" such as the on-line search results that come when you are trying to do a file search on your own machine. It is hard to conceive of the level of idiocy incompetence that would greenlight that from the bottom to the top.
But I read that most of MS's income growth is coming from on line services so they are going to push us on to the net come h*ll or high water, and if that generates instability they'll "help" us by offering us on line data storage for a monthly fee. I'm still flirting with going back to 8.1 but barring a major crash I guess it's too late. Each day that goes by I get further embedded in this one.
Greg N
One of the discussed causes (discussed does not mean verified, but what can you do) is incompatibility with some of the major anti-virus programs. ESET actually had a warning about issues with the update. My solution was I did not install Eset on this latest OS installation (I installed OS about four times before everything began to work correctly).
I am writing on a brand new build that had a number of instability issues. Maybe some were 1903. I didn't have any choice. If you're building now and install Win 10, you're going to get 1903. I went so far as to buy a Win 8.1 key, since Win 8.1 was the most stable system I've owned, much better than Win XP.
But for now I'm on Win 10. On this my latest installation I disconnected completely from the net during the installation process and have systematically said no to windows' efforts to get me to connect to an on-line account and also thwarted some "features" such as the on-line search results that come when you are trying to do a file search on your own machine. It is hard to conceive of the level of idiocy incompetence that would greenlight that from the bottom to the top.
But I read that most of MS's income growth is coming from on line services so they are going to push us on to the net come h*ll or high water, and if that generates instability they'll "help" us by offering us on line data storage for a monthly fee. I'm still flirting with going back to 8.1 but barring a major crash I guess it's too late. Each day that goes by I get further embedded in this one.
Greg N