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wd40 wrote: » I upgraded my 6 Years old Laptop, I replaced its HDD with a cheap, slow 120 GB HDD from an external drive years ago. Originally it had Vista, upgraded (for free) to Windows 7 and finally to Windows 10, I had dual boot with Kali Linux. Upgrade to windows 10 was extremely slow but successful, Dual Boot setup was not affected by the upgrade. So, upgrade is done and Windows started, CPU is @ 70%, RAM @ 60%, Slow HDD @100%, the laptop is not usable at all. So I created an image and a Boot DVD, removed a 120GB SSD (Which is worth 2x the laptop) from my PC and put it in the laptop, restore from image, now the laptop is good now, do I buy an SSD for the #$%$$# laptop or get a Microsoft Surface
Params7 wrote: » So I'm reading about the "botnets" or added user spying in Windows 10. Bunch of guides floating around showing how to disable them and others saying you can't. I haven't upgraded yet, but how bad is it?
stryder144 wrote: » I hear you on that. This is one of the main reasons why I don't load a lot of programs directly on my computer. I have migrated, for the most part, to using VMware Workstation, building VMs, then putting programs on them. Might seem like it is a bit much, but, I have been a lot less hesitant about updating/upgrading the OS directly on my machine. Just as long as I have backups of my VMs and other important data, I don't worry about having an update/upgrade go south on me.
techfiend wrote: » For years I've made it a prerequisite to install new programs and test them in VM's before installing them on the host OS. With VM's on SSD's you can hardly notice a difference in performance in virtualbox, kind of clunky on an HDD though. It's gone from about annual reformats to years without formats. Last time I formatted this box is when I 'upgraded' to Windows 8.1.
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