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The Windows 10 October 2018 Update is now fully available—for “advanced” users | Ars Technica

十一月 30, 2018 - MorningStar

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The dribble becomes a spurt —

The Windows 10 October 2018 Update is now fully available—for “advanced” users

The rollout of Microsoft’s beleaguered update will become a little faster now.

The Windows 10 October 2018 Update is now fully available—for “advanced” users | Ars Technica
Enlarge / Who doesn’t love some new Windows?

The Windows 10 October 2018 Update, version 1809, continues to limp out of the door. While the data-loss bug that saw its release entirely halted has been fixed, other blocking issues have restricted its rollout. It has so far only been available to those who manually check Windows Update for updates, and even there, Microsoft has restricted the speed at which it’s distributed.

This particular speed bump has now been removed, and manual checking for updates is now unthrottled. That means a manual check for updates will kick off the update process so long as your system isn’t actively blacklisted (and there are a few outstanding incompatibilities that mean it could be).

Microsoft is saying that this upgrade route is for “advanced” users. Everyone else should wait for the fully automatic deployment, which doesn’t seem to have started yet. That’ll have its own set of throttles and perhaps even new blacklists if further problems are detected. A number of the remaining compatibility problems are more likely to strike corporate users, as they involve corporate VPN and security software. Companies will need to apply the relevant patches for the third-party applications before they can roll out the Windows 10 update.

The problems faced by this release mean that it’s seeing the slowest rollout of a Windows 10 feature update for quite some time, coming after its predecessor, version 1803, was one of the quickest to be deployed. Even that took about three months before Microsoft removed the last of the throttles and pushed it out to everyone. Given the problems around version 1809, we’d expect the company to continue to be tentative, and erring on the side of caution.

Peter Bright Peter is Technology Editor at Ars. He covers Microsoft, programming and software development, Web technology and browsers, and security. He is based in Brooklyn, NY.
Email peter.bright@arstechnica.com // Twitter @drpizza

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