Angrry.exe™ Posted February 9, 2019 Share Posted February 9, 2019 Although it sparked a wave of enthusiasm and positive appreciation of the company, the news that Microsoft will offer Windows 10 free upgrade to all users of Windows 7 and Windows 8 / 8.1 was not as well received by everyone, a significant proportion of users hesitating and now to jump to the new OS. Unfortunately, simply declining offer does not seem to be an acceptable answer for Microsoft, and notices continue to appear even twice a day in the hope that even those who are left behind will eventually give up. But insistent notification messages, coupled with the fact that they can not be permanently disabled, only nudge unintended users in the Windows 10 camp, who now find another reason not to please Microsoft. Introduced first with an update package called KB3035583 and marked "recommended update" to be installed automatically, the application should check the compatibility of the PC used and inform the user of the upgrade offer. Whatever the reason, the mere refusal should have left the Upgrade topic closed. But the story does not stop here, the upgrade application remains firmly anchored in the guts of the operating system, continuing to show up for upgrade. Meanwhile, to make sure the more upscale users "do not find a way to get rid of the uninvited visitor, Microsoft has relaunched KB3035583 update in no less than 9 different versions, the upgrade recommendations become more insistent and hard to stop, the last iteration repeating the compatibility check and displaying the upgrade message twice a day. And if you refuse the upgrade every time, it's okay. Microsoft will download the Windows 10 installation kit anyway, taking up 6GB of the space available on the system partition, thinking that if you change your mind, the new OS can be installed immediately on your PC. To make the situation look like no exit, just uninstalling the KB3035583 package does not fix the changes to the operating system, the Windows 10 upgrade notification messages continue to appear in the same pattern. Fortunately, the problem can be resolved quickly with a free tool named GWX Control Panel. In addition to disabling notification messages, the utility promises to block reinstallation of the upgrade program in the event that Microsoft tries to deliver a new version through Windows Update. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts