Thanks for the advice. About the updates it seems that using Group Policy works. Fortunately I am not using Home. I would not recommend Home at all, since it does not even include Sandbox, which helps so much if you need an easy virtual environment.
https://www.windowscentral.com/how-stop-updates-installing-automatically-windows-10 What I hate more about force updates is that often they come with horrible timing. If I am working on something important, I do not want the risk of anything breaking the week before the deadline.
Then, what to do about these security updates? Supossedly they are necessary, so they ought to be included eventually, right?
Something I did was setting the Sleep button to just shut of displays, in the power options. Useful, while the other use was unnecessary, there are other ways.
The shift-shut off is helpful! Nice
dtgreene: * If you shut down the computer, then boot into a different operating system, attempting to access any file system that Windows had mounted at the time (in practice, I believe this includes all filesystems on internal drives that Windows understands, so not ext4/btrfs) is very likely to cause file system corruption.
This is especially interesting to keep in mind. Thank you!
Carradice: Do you know what Linux releases does GOG support? That might help people who are trying to choose a distribution.
Arcadius-8606: Each game has it listed but they tend to be Ubuntu 14.04 to 20.04.
I personally stick to LTS releases of Ubuntu derivatives like Ubuntu Mate. Currently, I'm on Ubuntu Mate 20.04 across all of my desktops and laptops and all of my games from GOG which are Linux based (98% of my collection) work without issue.
Sorry, I had missed your post. Yes, I later found the LInux support pages in GOG. They say they support the Ubuntu family. For playing games with Linux, it seems like a no brainer to stay in the family, unless one needs another distribution for some reason.
patrikc: Just use a tool like TCPView (both in Windows and Linux) and you will have a better understanding.
Also, a proper firewall (not Windows Firewall, that is just a bad joke at this point) to monitor network traffic. You will be surprised. For example, a server will be contacted when you go into Settings (why is that even necessary?), or when using the search bar (doesn't matter if you are looking for local files, you will still see network activity). Again, is that even necessary?
DirectX 12 is one of the major reasons many went along with the update route. Arguably, gaming is the leading factor.
And when it comes to looks, it has nothing over Windows 7, at least in my opinion. It adds more color than, say, Windows 8.1, but at what cost in the end? Windows personalisation is, much like other functions, a joke. To top it all off, they're still mixing legacy tools and UI elements with more modern ones. Makes you look at it and think: what is this thing even supposed to be?
The road ahead is not that bright if you ask me.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=uLOIVY7RZIE Here's something intriguing about data usage on Windows 10 (see attachment). Pretty busy this "System", mhmm.
Thanks for the insight. I was happy with W7. But then again, I was happy with the looks of XP. I loved the usability of W7 and how things that in the past had to be added now were there out of the box. The change to W10 has been forced and, well, maybe that is what we are to expect in the future.
Dark_art_: You can bypass by pressing shift while shutdown on the start menu or using the command "sutdown /s".
To turn off on Windows 8.1 right click on start menu -> Energy and Power -> ask for password -> scroll down. The settings are greyed out and must be enabled at the top of the page.
For Win10 you can google "disable fast startup".
Edit: I'm running Win 8.1 with Classic Shell for so long that can't even remember if you can open the Win+X menu with mouse right click on stock garbage start menu (funny how similar to Gnome 3).
Thanks! also I will think about shutdown /s Good tips there!