Donne wrote: » Has anyone found out online when Windows 10 will be released in the Irish and British Timezone BST? Thanks.
drunkmonkey wrote: » Anyone using a rift with Windows 8.1 any ideas whether to avoid windows 10 just yet...
jumbobreakfast wrote: » Countdown https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windowsforbusiness/default.aspx but I read somewhere that it would be at 5am BST If you have Nvidia then you should wait. Apparently the Oculus runtime only works if you perform an upgrade install and stick to the 350.12 Nvidia driver. The later drivers are based on WDDM 2.0 which the Oculus runtime doesnt fully support yet (no direct mode). Unfortunately I can see a problem with this upgrade as my download folder already has the latest Nvidia driver included so there is probably no way to block it. C:\$Windows.~BT\Drivers\DU\95455012-24b1-4a5c-8703-051afa66fbc7 If you try to install the Oculus runtime onto a clean install of Windows 10 then Windows goes into a boot loop so don't try that. We have to wait for Oculus to update their drivers to support WDDM 2.0 and not go into a boot loop on a Win10 clean install.
jumbobreakfast wrote: » Countdown https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windowsforbusiness/default.aspx but I read somewhere that it would be at 5am BST
Bayberry wrote: » That would be 5AM IST here in Ireland, then. "British Summer Time" isn't a time zone - it's a legal term defined only in UK law. Ireland uses "Irish Standard Time" to describe the period when Ireland and the UK and Portugal all observe Daylight Savings Time. (Legally, UTC/GMT is Standard Time in the UK, observed during the winter, and BST their Standard Time +1. In Ireland, Standard Time is UTC+1, and Irish Winter Time is defined as Irish Standard Time -1).
Jhcx wrote: » unless your motherboard is able to support x64 then yes you are stuck with 32. 32 could also be installed due to limited amount of ram on your laptop in order for it to perform better.
Bayberry wrote: » (Legally, UTC/GMT is Standard Time in the UK, observed during the winter, and BST their Standard Time +1. In Ireland, Standard Time is UTC+1, and Irish Winter Time is defined as Irish Standard Time -1).
coldfire1x wrote: » A quick question guys, my second laptop is 32bit windows 7, does that mean I am stuck with 32bit or is it possible to upgrade to 64bit Win 10?
jumbobreakfast wrote: » OK, strange we don't copy the British for standard time. So, UTC is safer to use then? Winter in Ireland = UTC and Summer = UTC+1
seligehgit wrote: » Is it with upgrading Windows 8 to Windows 10?
punisher5112 wrote: » Anyone know what usage on internet the download will be ?