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Windows 7 Prof with Windows 10 Pro License?
Message
From
15/09/2016 15:48:10
Walter Meester
HoogkarspelNetherlands
 
 
To
15/09/2016 12:41:27
General information
Forum:
Windows
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01640796
Message ID:
01640898
Views:
39
>>Which can be an advantage. I've been wasting a month battling a bug in the ARG library that got introduced in a Windows 10 update. If there are no updates there is less chance it will break something along the way.
>
>Can also be a disadvantage

Its easier to work with the bugs you know than to anticipate on anything that might break at the next upgrade.

>>>- Windows 10 is now a year old. Issues have been fixed
>>
>>Errr... The anniversary update last month has been a disaster. Look it up. E.g. Millions of web cams stopped working after the update.
>>See https://www.google.nl/search?q=windows+10+anniversary+udate+disaster&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-b-ab&gfe_rd=cr&ei=0MjaV-fwG4bZVJ_kpsgJ
>
>What OS gets everything right? Look at latest Apple updates that locked phones. And as Apple controls the hardware, they should have gotten this right. With Windows, there are thousands of hardware configurations and it's impossible to test every possible combination.

This is not about 'getting everything right'. There are too many issues with this update that it is advised to skip this update. Where does that leave your comment "Issues have been fixed" ? That sounds ridiculous.

>>>- Windows 10 is more secure out of the box than Windows 7. It's likely you can get by without anti-virus
>>
>>Not an issue for me as each client will have their anti virus irregardless
>
>And that *could* be overkill with Windows 10 as it's much more secure by default than Windows 7. It's *possible* that users can get by without any AV in Win10. Adding an AV decreases system resources for applications. That can be a disadvantage.

There is not going to be any self respecting enterprise that is going to solely rely on Windows 10 security.

>>>- Edge browser is far superior than IE and faster and more standards compliant than Chrome
>>
>>Unless you want to run activeX in your browser, which is the case in many enterprise level applications.
>
>Many enterprises are moving away from ActiveX components

Have you ever worked in an enterprise environment? This comment is so out of touch with reality that it is hard to believe that you even understand the enterprise. Enterprises run hundreds of applications and more often than not, applications that are more than a decade old. If an application requires activeX, edge is just not an option. Which IT department can afford to force every activeX web apps out of their enterprise?

>>Enterprise environments still will wait one or more years. the latest update proves they are right. Many of them just moved from XP to 7. They won't bite the bullet yet to go to Windows 10. Preferably they'll wait until other have solved certain problems. There are no compelling reasons for any self respecting company to rush to Windows 10. Windows 7 works just fine and will be for the foreable future.
>
>Many enterprises don't upgrade across all computers, instead opting for a phased upgrade and hardware is replaced. That means a three to four year upgrade path.

They might have pilots running on the latest OS, but the vast majority does not upgrade until its clear what needs to be done to roll it out to the rest of the company.
We've got 4 of the top 10 US medical centres as a client. Do you really think they will rush to Windows 10? Not a chance. Everything is tested the hell out of it until rolled out. Windows 10, certainly with the latest disaster upgrade does not have the track record the enterprise needs.
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