Forum Discussion
Has Anyone Downloaded and Installed the Creators Update?
- 8 years ago
A few things I have noticed and ran into...
This time around, the Creators Update (Windows Version 1703) didn't uninstall any of my programs, however, a few lost their registration, and had to be reactivated. Still annoying, but not as bad as before where programs had been fully removed and no notes left behind. I have only noticed this with a few programs, seems they may be storing registration information somewhere in the registry that is being overwrote during upgrades.
Some things I have noticed and have done...-Went back into Settings > Privacy and checked to make sure all the settings I wanted applied, are still applied. A few changed, most didn't.
-Your default applications are reset back to default during the upgrade... Chrome set as default browser? You're going to have to tell Win10 under Settings > Apps what you want for defaults again.
-Noticed there's a new section in settings, "Gaming", went in and turned the "Game Bar" off as I don't need that annoying thing when gaming, and I also disabled "Game Mode"
-Wired connections can now be set to metered! Settings > Network & Internet > Status > Change Connection Properties > Set as metered connect
-Those that use natural daylight instead of 100w equivilent lightbulbs for their room lighting might find the Settings > System > Display > Nightlight option useful. It allows you to change the color tone of your screen so that it's not as stressful on your eyes being the only bright object in the room. Allowing for a more warm coloration, or cooler, depending on the options you chose under "Night Light Settings".
All of that aside, while writing this out and poking at things to make sure information was accurate, I noticed something... When looking at the "Data Usage" under network, I have used over 10TB in the last month! ROFL
Most of it was me backing things up, and poking around in my server... Next up was Chrome at 670GB, but that was me streaming from my server. lol
Yep, it's fast, no doubt. For me, the download of the update took about ten minutes for each one, but then the installation itself took another forty five minutes or so for each one. Then, of course, I spent a while adjusting everything again and finding the new things to adjust. Plus, it downloaded new versions of all of the installed apps from the store.
Remember, too, that with your desktop having Windows 7, if you want to upgrade to Windows 10 you will have to pay for it. The free upgrade was only for a year after Windows 10 was released.
GabeU I already did the upgrade to Windows 10 on my desktop then went back to Windows 7. I read that they are still allowing people to upgrade free even though they encouraged people to do so for 1 year, and it supposly only being a 1 year thing. Its suppose to still accept the Windows 7 key for activation. I dont know for sure if its true. (When I was trying to install Windows 10 fresh on my laptop after trying the Creator Update - I entered my Windows 7 Key and it said it was not valid. I thought I was screwed, but here I guess the Windows 10 Key is stored in the computer --- which I did not know)
maratsade Dont you have your connection set to Metered so that it does not randomly download updates and use data? I found some changes with the Creator Update. The one that I like the most is that you can set Ethernet Connections as Metered now in Network & Internet Settings. You can read through this site for other changes.
- maratsade8 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
wildcats198308, I did set the connection to metered once and I didn't like the system's behavior after that. I kept getting messages from apps that were trying to run updates (one was the antivirus app) and I didn't care for that. I changed my active hours to 8 am - 2 pm, and that seems to make the updates download outside of those hours.
- GabeU8 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
wildcats198308 wrote:GabeU I already did the upgrade to Windows 10 on my desktop then went back to Windows 7. I read that they are still allowing people to upgrade free even though they encouraged people to do so for 1 year, and it supposly only being a 1 year thing. Its suppose to still accept the Windows 7 key for activation. I dont know for sure if its true. (When I was trying to install Windows 10 fresh on my laptop after trying the Creator Update - I entered my Windows 7 Key and it said it was not valid. I thought I was screwed, but here I guess the Windows 10 Key is stored in the computer --- which I did not know)
If you had already installed Windows 10 free upgrade on your desktop and then went back to Windows 7, you should be able to reinstall Windows 10 on it without issue due to Microsoft registering your desktop's Windows 10 free upgrade with a "digital license." When it's reinstalled Microsoft should recognize it and activate it without issue. That is, I believe, as long as you haven't replaced much hardware, especially the motherboard, in the desktop since you had Windows 10 installed.
- wildcats1983088 years agoTutor
GabeU wrote:
wildcats198308 wrote:GabeU I already did the upgrade to Windows 10 on my desktop then went back to Windows 7. I read that they are still allowing people to upgrade free even though they encouraged people to do so for 1 year, and it supposly only being a 1 year thing. Its suppose to still accept the Windows 7 key for activation. I dont know for sure if its true. (When I was trying to install Windows 10 fresh on my laptop after trying the Creator Update - I entered my Windows 7 Key and it said it was not valid. I thought I was screwed, but here I guess the Windows 10 Key is stored in the computer --- which I did not know)
If you had already installed Windows 10 free upgrade on your desktop and then went back to Windows 7, you should be able to reinstall Windows 10 on it without issue due to Microsoft registering your desktop's Windows 10 free upgrade with a "digital license." When it's reinstalled Microsoft should recognize it and activate it without issue. That is, I believe, as long as you haven't replaced much hardware, especially the motherboard, in the desktop since you had Windows 10 installed.
Nothing was replaced in the desktop. My main concern is the Creator Update not working like it was with my Laptop. All my systems are OLD. My desktop is older than my laptop. I do have a Netbook computer which is a few years newer but I dont use it at all really. Its extremely slow and small, I got it free and plan to just use it if travel better to take on a plane or something than my 17" laptop which it being an old system its bulky and heavy.
Nieces laptop is only a few years old, it had Windows 8.1 which I upgraded to Windows 10 right away. My moms laptop is a newer Dell it came with Windows 7, but Dell supports it for Windows 10 - they have Drivers and all for Windows 10 on the website for it.
- GabeU8 years agoDistinguished Professor IV
If the desktop ran decently when you had Windows 10 installed on it before, it should be able to run version 1703 (Creators Update version) without a problem. You may not be able to do some of the things that require more ample power, like the 3D, VR and Ink apps, but for the most part it should be okay.
I believe the system requirements for 1703 are the same as they are for the previous versions of Windows 10, but like I said, some things may not work well, or even at all, due to your computer's age. BUT, with that said, Windows 7 is getting up there in age. Mainstream support is over, but you will at least still get critical updates for a few more years.
If your system just barely meets the minimal system requirements for Windows 10, it may not run very well. It will run, but it won't be very responsive. This is why I changed back to Windows 8.1 with my notebook. It just met the minimal system requirements for Windows 10, and I mean just. When I upgraded it, even after adjusting everything I could to boost perfromance, it was still pretty slow. This was even with an SSD instead of the standard HDD that came with it. Going back to Windows 8.1 made it much more responsive and pretty speedy for such a minimal notebook.
If you have easy options for going back to Windows 7 if 10 is too slow, I'd say try it, but if not, I don't know that I would. If you have an original Windows 7 installation disk, and a way to save a system image, you may be able to save a system image of the Windows 7 that's installed on it now and use that for later if Windows 10 turns out to not be good. In order to restore with the Windows 7 system image, though, you'd have to use the Windows 7 installation disk to install Windows 7, then use the system image to restore that Windows 7 image. The reason for this is that you can't use a Windows 7 system image to restore a computer that has Windows 10 on it. It will say that the Operating Systems don't match. If you don't have a Windows 7 installation disk, but you do have a valid Windows 7 product key, you may be able to download the Windows 7 ISO from Microsoft and burn it to a DVD.
If restoring didn't work, but you do have a W7 installation disk or a valid key so you can use it to download the ISO and create your own, you'd have to download all of the updates and such after installation. That's the pain in the butt part, and with there having been so many since Windows 7 came out, there's always the possibility that you could run into problems doing so. Ricky was having all sorts of problems trying to get his fresh Windows 8.1 installation to Update. I had a problem updating a clean Windows 8.1 install until I got some help on Microsoft's forums. I'm not trying to scare you, just stating the realities of what can happen.
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