Alan,

At some point, the updates need to be implemented.  Enterprises can delay
it.  Small companies with no (or limited) internal tech usually can't.  Or
they come up with kludges to stop them.  But in essence the Windows 10 you
have today will not be the same Windows 10 you have in 1.5 years.  I am
wondering why they even bother with keeping the 10. Why not call it Windows
build 1803 (in your case)....  The 10 is just irrelevant now.

Just my 2 cents...

Fletcher

Fletcher Johnson
[email protected]
LinkedIn.com/in/FletcherJohnson
twitter.com/fletcherJ
strava.com/athletes/fletcherjohnson
408-946-0960 - work
408-781-2345 - cell


-----Original Message-----
From: ProFox [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Alan Bourke
Sent: Friday, March 15, 2019 7:45 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [NF] Looking for current summary of VFP clones

> Since the upgrades are forced on everyone, unless you have a computer 
> like one of mine that crashes when MS tries to push an upgrade (and 
> then reverts), in theory, everyone is running on the same version.

Not true. Windows 10 Pro, Education and Enterprise versions can defer
feature updates (i.e. the big semi-annual ones) for up to a year. This would
need to be specifically configured in Group Policy though. Our organisation
has thousands of Windows 10 boxes I imagine, and we're all still on 1803.

You cannot normally defer these updates in Windows 10 Home without fiddling
in the registry. But hey, what business is using that version, right?


-- 
  Alan Bourke
  alanpbourke (at) fastmail (dot) fm

[excessive quoting removed by server]

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