lol windows10是有屎以来最不稳定的os# PDA - 掌中宝
p*m
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Windows 10 is shaping up to be the most unstable release since Millennium
Edition (ME)
By Randall C. KennedyPublished 8 hours ago
107 Comments
inShare
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PC problem
Is Windows 10 unstable? That's the question that’s circulating through the
blogosphere of late. With even veteran Windows watchers like Mary Jo Foley
and Paul Thurrott now documenting their frustrations with the new OS, the
perception that Microsoft released Windows 10 before it was ready is
beginning to grow.
A quick perusal of peer-to-peer support sites like www.tenforums.com will
give you a taste of just how widespread the malaise truly is. From buggy
device drivers to "vanishing" modern apps, Windows 10 seems to have arrived
with more than its fair share of rough edges.
SEE ALSO: How to fix Windows 10's worst problems
I’ve personally documented my own (as yet still unresolved) issues with
Windows 10’s lack of video driver support for first generation Windows
tablet PCs. The finger pointing between Intel, Microsoft and the various
hardware OEMs who are affected by this bug continues to this day. And in the
course of upgrading to Windows 10 on several other, seemingly compatible
PCs, I’ve encountered more than my fair share of general weirdness,
including:
Modern apps that simply won’t start. It often takes several taps/clicks on
the corresponding Start Menu tile to get Modern apps to load. Tap once and
nothing. Tap twice, again nothing. Finally, on the third or fourth try, the
apps loads. My developer "spidey-sense" tells me it most likely has to do
with a previous incarnation of the app’s process not fully shutting down.
But whatever the source, it’s annoying as hell and makes Windows 10 feel
less responsive than it should.
Modern apps that suddenly "vanish" from the screen. I’m sure the app has
crashed somehow, but the lack of corresponding visual feedback makes it all
the more alarming. A simple error dialog with a hint at what happened (and
perhaps a lead on how to fix it) would be nice. Even an Event Log entry
would give us a starting point for diagnosis, but nada.
Random freeze-ups upon resuming from sleep. On my Surface 3, if I leave the
PC for a few minutes and it enters sleep mode, then resume it from sleep
with a key press on the Touch Keyboard, I find I’m often frozen out for 10-
15 seconds. This typically happens right after I’ve swiped away the lock
screen. I then wait a bit and the system finally becomes responsive again.
It’s almost as if the PC hung for a second (though the trackpad pointer is
still active) and then somehow got unstuck. Needless to say, very alarming.
Random scrolling issues in Modern apps. I’ll be scrolling through a web
page in Edge and suddenly it freezes. Not the browser window, or even the
tab controls, just the "content" within the tab itself. And even then, I can
still interact with the underlying page (e.g. hyperlinks and JavaScript
still work) -- just not move it in any direction. Refreshing the page doesn
’t fix it, but closing the tab (but not the browser itself), and then
reloading the page into a new tab, fixes the issue -- until it happens again.
Interestingly, I’ve also encountered the scrolling issue in other Modern
apps, most notably Mail and a Feedly-based RSS Reader app I use called
Readiy (great app, BTW). Both exhibit similar behavior: Scrolling just stops
dead until you close/reopen the app. I suspect that the problem may be
linked to the trackpad on my Surface 3 (it mostly happens when scrolling in
"deskto" mode), but it’s still quite disconcerting. More importantly, it’s
the kind of random usability bug that makes Windows look bad when compared
to iOS.
The sad thing is that I don’t remember encountering nearly as many issues
when I first started using Windows 8. Yes, there were some video driver
issues when I upgraded my Envy x2 to Windows 8.1. But these were quickly
sorted out by a driver update from HP. However, I don’t recall having as
many problems with Modern apps running under Windows 8.x (e.g. no sudden "
poof" events with the Mail client or Modern IE), and I certainly never
experienced the kind of random freezes/lockups I’m seeing with Windows 10.
To be fair, Microsoft is trying something new with Windows 10: A rolling
update cycle in which the OS is never truly "finished" but instead keeps
evolving over time. However, I can’t help but feel that the Windows team
perhaps used this new development mantra as an excuse for cutting corners
and releasing a remarkably unpolished (for a full release of Windows)
product. Maybe this new approach will provide dividends in the future, but
right now it’s leaving a sour initial taste, one that may prove extremely
hard for Microsoft to mask down the road.
Edition (ME)
By Randall C. KennedyPublished 8 hours ago
107 Comments
inShare
2
PC problem
Is Windows 10 unstable? That's the question that’s circulating through the
blogosphere of late. With even veteran Windows watchers like Mary Jo Foley
and Paul Thurrott now documenting their frustrations with the new OS, the
perception that Microsoft released Windows 10 before it was ready is
beginning to grow.
A quick perusal of peer-to-peer support sites like www.tenforums.com will
give you a taste of just how widespread the malaise truly is. From buggy
device drivers to "vanishing" modern apps, Windows 10 seems to have arrived
with more than its fair share of rough edges.
SEE ALSO: How to fix Windows 10's worst problems
I’ve personally documented my own (as yet still unresolved) issues with
Windows 10’s lack of video driver support for first generation Windows
tablet PCs. The finger pointing between Intel, Microsoft and the various
hardware OEMs who are affected by this bug continues to this day. And in the
course of upgrading to Windows 10 on several other, seemingly compatible
PCs, I’ve encountered more than my fair share of general weirdness,
including:
Modern apps that simply won’t start. It often takes several taps/clicks on
the corresponding Start Menu tile to get Modern apps to load. Tap once and
nothing. Tap twice, again nothing. Finally, on the third or fourth try, the
apps loads. My developer "spidey-sense" tells me it most likely has to do
with a previous incarnation of the app’s process not fully shutting down.
But whatever the source, it’s annoying as hell and makes Windows 10 feel
less responsive than it should.
Modern apps that suddenly "vanish" from the screen. I’m sure the app has
crashed somehow, but the lack of corresponding visual feedback makes it all
the more alarming. A simple error dialog with a hint at what happened (and
perhaps a lead on how to fix it) would be nice. Even an Event Log entry
would give us a starting point for diagnosis, but nada.
Random freeze-ups upon resuming from sleep. On my Surface 3, if I leave the
PC for a few minutes and it enters sleep mode, then resume it from sleep
with a key press on the Touch Keyboard, I find I’m often frozen out for 10-
15 seconds. This typically happens right after I’ve swiped away the lock
screen. I then wait a bit and the system finally becomes responsive again.
It’s almost as if the PC hung for a second (though the trackpad pointer is
still active) and then somehow got unstuck. Needless to say, very alarming.
Random scrolling issues in Modern apps. I’ll be scrolling through a web
page in Edge and suddenly it freezes. Not the browser window, or even the
tab controls, just the "content" within the tab itself. And even then, I can
still interact with the underlying page (e.g. hyperlinks and JavaScript
still work) -- just not move it in any direction. Refreshing the page doesn
’t fix it, but closing the tab (but not the browser itself), and then
reloading the page into a new tab, fixes the issue -- until it happens again.
Interestingly, I’ve also encountered the scrolling issue in other Modern
apps, most notably Mail and a Feedly-based RSS Reader app I use called
Readiy (great app, BTW). Both exhibit similar behavior: Scrolling just stops
dead until you close/reopen the app. I suspect that the problem may be
linked to the trackpad on my Surface 3 (it mostly happens when scrolling in
"deskto" mode), but it’s still quite disconcerting. More importantly, it’s
the kind of random usability bug that makes Windows look bad when compared
to iOS.
The sad thing is that I don’t remember encountering nearly as many issues
when I first started using Windows 8. Yes, there were some video driver
issues when I upgraded my Envy x2 to Windows 8.1. But these were quickly
sorted out by a driver update from HP. However, I don’t recall having as
many problems with Modern apps running under Windows 8.x (e.g. no sudden "
poof" events with the Mail client or Modern IE), and I certainly never
experienced the kind of random freezes/lockups I’m seeing with Windows 10.
To be fair, Microsoft is trying something new with Windows 10: A rolling
update cycle in which the OS is never truly "finished" but instead keeps
evolving over time. However, I can’t help but feel that the Windows team
perhaps used this new development mantra as an excuse for cutting corners
and releasing a remarkably unpolished (for a full release of Windows)
product. Maybe this new approach will provide dividends in the future, but
right now it’s leaving a sour initial taste, one that may prove extremely
hard for Microsoft to mask down the road.