This has bothered me since I've installed win10, the slow startups. Its about 2x as slow as win8.1 (running on HDD) and win10 is on SSD, heres what happens
turn on PC
bios screen displayed for a second
blackness for 10-30 seconds
blue screen where I can select which OS (after a couple of seconds it defaults to win10,normally I don't touch it)
black screen, bios screen displayed for a second!!! wtf its like it reboots again
windows starts up in 10seconds ->5 minutes
previously with only win8.1 & linux installed, after the OS selection part, it would then load straight into the OS, i.e. no reboot
So whats up and more importantly how to fix it?
thanks mate, yes thats what I have,It sounds like you may have 2 OSs installed that have a different primary or boot partition configuration.
Two new bits of information have surfaced regarding Windows 10 and its various DRM and phone-home strategies. First, there’s news that looks great at first glance — Windows 10 no longer supports the much-hated SecuROM and SafeDisc. The downside of this news is that Windows 10 can no longer play those titles if the DRM hasn’t been patched out by the original developer.
...
On the other hand, however, this means a number of games, some released quite recently, will no longer work without new patches or game cracks. While SafeDisc hasn’t been used for several years, a number of games shipped with SecuROM, including titles like Fallout 3, Dragon Age II (EA attempted to camouflage this by calling it Sony Release Control), Oblivion, BioShock, the released version of Final Fantasy for PC in 2012, and dozens more over the years.
We therefore arrive at a hilarious moment in which Microsoft is advocating that people download game cracks for legally purchased content, chase developers for updates (despite the fact that many of the studios in question may have closed), or repurchase games on platforms like GOG, which don’t use DRM.
...
Classic gamers may choose to stick with Windows 7, assuming they don’t have a vintage DOS box or Windows 98 system hanging around, but this compatibility issue should’ve been disclosed prior to launch. As for whether or not MS intends to start scanning systems for pirated software, we’ll have to wait and see.
Agreed, but that's the title the website chose. It doesn't take much insight to figure out if DRM is "out" what alternatives are left for rightsholders? And since this OS is all about generating potential revenue from harvested data, why not offer a fee-based service to software manufacturers and provide targeted detailed product information from Win 10 devices. It would be a brilliant move for MS to eventually "milk both sides of the fence", and provide their solution to DRM management.Where do you get the bit about "may phone home about cracked games"?
The truth is it does not, so why even post rhetoric about possible changes that are no where within sight?
I think you misunderstand; DRM Is not "out", only a very specific, very archaic, and very security vulnerable method of DRM that nobody uses anymore is "out". Current, modern DRM implementations are still functioning as they should, example being pretty much every big-ticket game in your (or anyone else's) STEAM library.Agreed, but that's the title the website chose. It doesn't take much insight to figure out if DRM is "out" what alternatives are left for rightsholders?
I changed it over in bios, and it boots, though first time had to reboot 3x, got a BSOD (light blue now with a sad face smilie) yes got the startup repair twice, but it looks like its working now@zed be careful with changing boot from BIOS. Last time I did that I need to manually rewrite the BCD thing
usually when windows fail to detect proper installation, 'startup repair' can repair it.
Im using this, with win 8 drivers, it plays sound no worries, recording atm is limited to 44.1k / 24 which I can live with & Im sure win 10 drivers will turn up before the year is outBTW what audio device you use?
I can't even safely buy soundcard because the only confirmed total working is Asus xonar and other generic Chinese with C+media chip.