Le 25/03/2016 18:09, Chris Murphy a écrit :
Hardware driver and kernel reliability has improved immensely between XP and 10, it's a significantly more stable operating system with far fewer instances of kernel panics / blue screens.
I don't know how you can prove that. the last few days, I had probably 5 Windows 10 crashes, that is more than one fore each hour of use, on my new windows 10 tablet, but instead of a blue screen one have now a crash report lasting long before releasing. In this respect I had less problems with Windows 7. But I don't use this system sufficiently to make statistics. I know nothing about recent development system of Microsoft, but I guess they may have also an automated system and, for sure an immense beta tester base (I was one of them in an other life :-)
"If something goes bad, we'll just tell them to use System Restore" I don't know what.
I *never* on more than 20 years use seen Windows repair system repair anything, even problems I could fix myself in minutes. To restore you have to get a restore disk, and pretty often Windows refuses to make one. last week, Windows 10 insisted to use dvd on the same tablet, which of course have no dvd (I was happy to have an usb dvd writer). Not possible on sd card nor usb stick... That said I neither could restore a linux system after a crash (no problem for data). It was much faster to reinstall the system than to fix the handful of setup needed by the hardware change by the way I didn't read anything about SSD (see subject), but noticed on new install a "ssd" option in fstab for file systems jdd -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org