Optodata
Hi - thanks for the info. In my Forbes Tech link above on multi-monitor problems it says
"Dreadful Drivers - The flaw revolves around Nvidia graphics cards with users taking to Nvidia’s forums to report Windows Update is automatically installing new drivers which break multimonitor setups, SLI (dual card) configurations and can even stop PCs booting entirely which pushes Windows 10 into its emergency recovery mode.
The problem is compounded by the fact that Windows Update doesn’t actually reveal driver version numbers prior to install or warn the user in advance so pinpointing something that has suddenly caused problems can be hard to identify."
I'm not suggesting that is your problem, nor that it's definitely Win 10 and not PDR13 which we know has Nvidia driver problems in 8.1.
My point is simply this -
I have had the unfortunate experience of every new Windows release since DOS - in true pioneering spirit! The most stable new release was Win 7 following the Vista disaster. We are only weeks into Win 10 and general consensus is that, unlike Win 7, Microsoft was premature in their release of Win 10.
Worse still, it appears that they have held back the release of commercial versions of Win 10 expecting "free" Home users to sort out the bugs and compatibility issues - so we are really still doing Beta testing for them.
Here is another link -
Windows 10 Review Roundup: High Scores, Big Bugs
There are no real advantages of moving to Win 10 yet. The core is very similar to 8.1, performance about the same, and the biggest marketing attraction is the new GUI which most Win 8,1 users like me have sorted out. It will improve and things like Direct X 12 look promising for gamers.
This obviously also makes life tough for software developers like Cyberlink.
This is not my opinion, but I do agree with the experts. It will probably be the best Windows release ever due to it's cross platform compatibility allowing you to do the same things on your smartphone, tablet, and desktop - BUT NOT YET!
It has taken me (and Cyberlink) a year to have a stable system on Win 8.1 and I'm still being annoyed by Microsoft daily by automatically download Win 10 and trying to force me to upgrade. The real problem is that 30 days later Win 10 become irreversable - and even the "roll back" doesn't always work!
So if you want to avoid the "arrows", stay away from "Bleeding Edge" technology and wait for the next major release in Oct(?) and the transition should be much easier.
Al
This message was edited 3 times. Last update was at Aug 19. 2015 19:29
Power Director 13&14 Ultimate, Photo Director 6, Audio Dir, Pwr2Go 10
Win 10 64, Intel MB DH87MC, Intel i5-4670 CPU @ 3.40GHz, 16Gb DDR3 1600, 128Gb SSD, 2x1Tb WDBlue 7200rpmSATA6, Intel 4600 GPU, Gigabyte G1 GTX960 4GB, LG BluRay Writer