Bayberry wrote: » I have a basic Asus laptop. After the update to Win10, I couldn't use the 2-fingered drag on the trackpad to scroll pages up and down. I downloaded the latest version of SmartGesture from the Asus website, and everything worked after I installed it (I had to manually uninstall the current version first, but I didn't test to see if scrolling worked before I installed the latest version). The following day, Windows Update delivered an updated Touchpad driver. (ELANtech). At that point I decided to uninstall SmartGesture, as I had found out that Windows10 has built-in support for trackpad gestures. Everything kept working. A few days later, Windows Update installed a new version of SmartGesture. The only issue that I had with each of these changes is that I am used to using trackpad scrolling by pulling downwards to get to the bottom of the page (I pull down, the page scrolls up). After each of these updates, the scroll direction changed - when I pulled down, the page pulled down, so I was getting to the top of the page. I had to pick around in SmartGesture or the ElanTech properties to change this setting each time. A very minor hassle, and I'd probably have gotten used to the default action after a day or two - both methods have a certain logic to them).
blade1 wrote: » It's an Asus I have as well and I got the touchpad update. Before the update I had a flashing blue circle by the cursor. I don't know if I had the pinch/zoom and scroll issue before the update though. I could have had.
Bayberry wrote: » In the Programs and Features control panel, I see that I have Asus Smart Gesture version 4.05 (installed on the 9th) and ELAN Touchpad 15.8.4.3_X64_WHQL (installed n the 3rd). When the Touchpad driver was installed on the 3rd, I went to "Mouse & Touchpad" settings, selected "Additional Mouse options", and there was a new panel there, with a red ELAN logo, where I was able to change the scroll direction. After Windows update installed the Smart Gesture app, that Elan panel is still displayed on the Mouse properties, but I can't make any changes to it. I had to open the Smart Gesture panel, but double-clicking on the little trackpad icon in the "Show hidden icons" panel. I can't remember whether pinch-to-zoom was checked when I checked the "Content moves reversely with your finger's" box. Yes, it really does say "Content moves reversely with your finger's".
seligehgit wrote: » Anybody in a position to clarify if SKY GO works on internet explorer? Originally posted by seligehgit Big nuisance factor but I can't use SKY GO on my laptop which has Windows 10 as an operating system?Any chance this difficulty will be sorted soon? Hi seligehgit, Thanks for your post.I have looked into this for you and at the moment Sky Go is not compatible with the default browser (Edge) on Windows 10. However, if you open Sky Go using Internet Explorer there should be no service issues. Thanks, William
[B]"C:\Program Files (x86)\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe" [url]http://go.sky.com[/url][/B]
dreamers75 wrote: » Anyone planning on making the jump from 7 to 10?
droidman123 wrote: » Hoping someone can help me. I upgraded to windows 10 last week, every is fine except one frustrating problem. When i put my laptop into sleep mode it goes asleep. But before the upgrade i touched the mousepad or indeed any button and it woke up. Now it wont wake at all even though the light in the power button is on. I have to keep holding the power button to completely turn the laptop off and then reboot it, its doing my head in. I went into settings and played around with all the power and sleep settings with no success. Anyone any ideas. Its a 6 month old hp laptop and i never had this problem before the upgrade.
Hoagy wrote: » This problem has been discussed in detail on tenforums and there is a workaround which seems to work.
MiskyBoyy wrote: » I get that but under Settings>Update & Security> Activation. Are both saying activated? I'm just curious is all.
_CreeD_ wrote: » Had an interesting issue with my movie PC last night (a mini-itx with basic specs but a midline CPU (dual core 3Ghz i5)). The system was crawling with about 10 different system processes chewing up CPU and memory. The worst was 'Runtime Broker'. Did a little digging and one of it's functions is the Windows Update sharing service. I had it set to Lan only on my other PCs but had forgotten on this one so I was basically sharing to the interwebz at a ridiculous cost to system resources. Just FYI, one more thing to check when ye olde PC starts slowing down out of the blue. Settings / Update & Security / Windows Update / Advanced Options / Choose how updates are delivered / ( Either turn it off or set to Local Network only ).
Shred wrote: » Not one, but two of my HDs were fecked. I ordered a Samsung Evo 850 250GB, lobbed it in, did another clean install and all is good with the world once again. Sweet jebus, there really is a phenomenal performance increase though; Steam game loads are almost instantaneous!
irishmover wrote: » Welcome to the present!
racersedge wrote: » A family member forwarded this article on to me yesterday. For some, I am sure it will be an excuse to raise pitchforks at Microsoft and how they go at operating things. From a personal note, it will be interesting to see if this is something they choose to act on. It is one thing to put it into the user agreements, perhaps another to actually act on it. One would think that the company would have a longer memory span and recall what happened when they attempted to enforce draconian DRM features on the X-Box One. Including this in might be seen as 'scare tactics' for people to avoid using such software under the impression that they will be nabbed. On the other hand, haven't Microsoft, through their updates and such, included recognition software for genuine parts in the past. So is this just a variation of that (and exactly how successful were those tools?) As I said, I think it will be interesting to see if this is acted on. Having done, in my opinion, a good job with rolling out Windows 10, something like this could be seen as a step back and give the naysayers something else to point fingers at them over. Also, it wouldn't be the first time since the announcement of Windows 10 that we saw a situation where they were inviting people with one hand, shooing them away with the other.
STB. wrote: » I am in the exact same position and I had one of those SSDs ordered. Do you not run into licence key issues if you install to a new HDD rather than Upgrade on a current OS on existing HDD. What is the exact process. I'd rather keep a HDD with Win 7 Pro rather than upgrading it.