Just print to PDF. No one really needs a HTML export of a webpage nowadays.short answer - you can't save a page with the edge browser
unbelievable
Just print to PDF. No one really needs a HTML export of a webpage nowadays.short answer - you can't save a page with the edge browser
unbelievable
Mate, you havent tried this have you?Just print to PDF. No one really needs a HTML export of a webpage nowadays.
Doesn't every non shitty website that allows you to order stuff offer you a printable page/print button/send by email etc?
Can't remember the last time I felt I had to save a page.
And if all else fails there is always the print screen button
Yes the print screen was what I used (multiple times)Doesn't every non shitty website that allows you to order stuff offer you a printable page/print button/send by email etc?
Can't remember the last time I felt I had to save a page.
And if all else fails there is always the print screen button
Ha, I didnt even think of that, just shows you how little I use the standard keyboard shortcuts now, but no that doesnt work.CTRL-S ?
In this case it was just a conformation popup of my flight being booked and paid for but thats beside the pointI was under the impression you just wanted to save what you entered (and what got sent to the server) and not wanted to save it for later use.
Weird. Mine will only ever do it automatically in the middle of the night. Otherwise it gives me the option to update and restart, just like previous versions.PC was doing rendering when Windows decided to install update and reboot itself.... nice
Even if the default allows Windows to reboot itself, it should at least have some detection on whether the PC is busy or not. Apparently while maxing all cores Windows just doesn't care.
The PC is basically unattended. Just installed Windows 3 days ago. Only installed the required software. Boss decided to use it. This is for rendering with 3ds max. Yes, it ran at night.Weird. Mine will only ever do it automatically in the middle of the night. Otherwise it gives me the option to update and restart, just like previous versions.
Except in my use case, I can't really specify an active hours since I don't know when the PC will be active (no fixed schedule). Sometimes it will ran for days, sometimes not being used for days.Settings -> Updates -> Restart Options -> On -> Pick a time ?
You can also specify "Active Hours"
What's wrong with the old solution (Windows 7)? Personally I want to install Windows 7 on that PC, the problem is that when I previously installed Windows 7 on modern hardware (i7-7xxx series), it was a bit of a hassle, thus this time I chose Windows 10 and yes, the installation went really smooth.Also, Microsoft wants you to pay for the pro version if you want to use it, you know, professionally. Then you can disable automatic updates using a group policy.
How to schedule when Windows 10 updates restart your PC
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2953010/windows/how-to-schedule-your-windows-10-updates.html
That's the problem with this PC. Since it is mostly unattended, I can't be bothered to check periodically when it asked to restart. And for some reason, after I enabled that pause update for 35 days thing, I leave the office and let the PC rendering, and it again restarted after installing an update.
I don't ask for anything fancy, but at least it should be able to detect about whether the PC is busy or not and only restart when it isn't busy. I think maxing 8c/16t is a good enough indication for don't restart this PC.