The issue with being an early adopter is having to deal with all the issues like a guinea pig(with testing). I'd ask you to wait and see what the OS'es updates have brought per reviews and feedback from the www.
Reserved storage sets aside disk space to be used by updates, apps, temporary files, and system caches. It improves the day-to-day function of your PC by ensuring critical OS functions always have access to disk space. Reserved storage will be enabled automatically on new PCs with Windows 10, version 1903 pre-installed, and for clean installs. It will not be enabled when updating from a previous version of Windows 10.
This should be fun with my 2 Asus Transformers.so the inability to install it with USB devices plugged in, is still a thing? That is going to be fun with people less than 32gb of free space then, gl installing it. Microsoft breaks a feature they only just implemented in previous version.
Downloads the update himself. Its taken its time, every day this week has been a new Cumulative Update
so the inability to install it with USB devices plugged in, is still a thing? That is going to be fun with people less than 32gb of free space then, gl installing it. Microsoft breaks a feature they only just implemented in previous version.
Downloads the update himself. Its taken its time, every day this week has been a new Cumulative Update
My laptop is still running version 1809 (Home 64 bit), and I'm in no hurry to upgrade it because laptops seem to have more problems due to proprietary parts, and also because I use the laptop the most.
Not yet. I'm waiting until it tries to do it by itself, just to see what happens.@USAFRet have you tried updating your device with 32gb of storage yet?
AVOID!Microsoft released Windows 10 v1903. Did anyone try it? How is it?
I, personally, had no issues with this version.
Well, I managed to fix Microsoft Photos, but still a no-go on the update. Again, the problem I’m having is related to Broadwell-E CPU’s only. Everything else should be fine as far as I’m aware.Same here, but that alone is not a valid metric. But when you look at what has been in the tech press, ask anyone who does support for a living, and ask most Windows 10 users who've transitioned to 1903 the picture is clear: it's been one of the smoothest feature updates since Windows 10 came on the scene.
When I read testimony such as that offered by @Jennifer W I don't deny for a minute that those events occurred. But it also clearly indicates to me underlying instability in that Windows 10 installation that must be addressed. The best way to address it is to do a completely clean reinstall so that you know you have a stable base upon which future updates can be lain. You can't build a house on quicksand.
There seems to be a complete lack of understanding that when a tiny minority of the user base as a whole is having issues, and they always do, that this indicates an issue with their own machine, not Windows 10. [And the same is true regardless of the OS and update.] There comes a time when an update exposes underlying instability that was there for a very long time, but was not in an area that was being actively exploited. It can happen to any of us, and not due to anything we've done as an end user. That doesn't change the fact that it is "on our end" rather than Microsoft's in the vast majority of cases. Most Computer Issues Are Idiosyncratic - Not Global.
Well, I managed to fix Microsoft Photos, but still a no-go on the update. Again, the problem I’m having is related to Broadwell-E CPU’s only. Everything else should be fine as far as I’m aware.
It’s a kernel issue. Reinstalling windows won’t do anything.Having problems with Broadwell-E CPUs it’s strange...
Please try installing v1903 clean (format partition C, etc.)