Microsoft recently announced that it will double the number of advertisements on the Start page in Windows 10 starting around July 2016. Does anyone still doubt that Microsoft’s long-term strategy is heavily focused on advertising? Or why Microsoft has been pushing people so hard to upgrade to Windows 10 its new advertising platform?
Daily Archives: May 19, 2016
Relief for Windows 7 update headaches
As if in response to my recent post about the joys of updating new Windows 7 installs, Microsoft has just announced a solution. It’s effectively Service Pack 2 for Windows 7, but Microsoft is calling it the Windows 7 SP1 convenience rollup.
The new package will install all post-SP1 updates up to April 2016. After you install Windows 7 with Service Pack 1, you need only install the April 2015 servicing stack update for Windows 7 (KB3020369), a prerequisite for the rollup, then install the rollup, then install any updates published after April 2016.
I haven’t yet tried the new rollup, but it’s difficult to imagine how it could fail to be an improvement.
Microsoft also plans to provide monthly non-security update rollups for Windows 7 and 8.1.