Why the fuck did M$ shove this feature down our throats?
Who the hell thought this was a good idea?
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you cant even disable it
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acually this seems like not bad idea.
if you dont gracefully exit application yourself but let it be force closed on shutdown, there is high chance after power-on you might want to pick up where you left off.
but there should on/off swich
Yeah but who actually uses Windows 10 apps?
It does this with spotify and thunderbird for me, both not from their app store.
You guys just hate change. Windows 10 is nearly 3 years old and some people (not me) is their first OS on their own laptop. You need to grow up and accept it.
>You need to grow up and accept it.
Don't equate "Growing up" with "accepting bullshit"
fuck off kike
so this is why chrome randomly started opening on log on recently?
I have Enterprise N LTSB 2016 and I don't get retarded, half baked "feature" updates, only security updates. I don't have this problem and it all works on my machine.
Stupid normies that don't understand that how to manage applications without a fischer-price tier app store to hold their hand. There's literally nothing in the store that's worth using anyways, except maybe the Bash on Windows subsystem thing, but I can just open QEMU and resume my Fedora VM if I want Linux tools, or if my internet connection is good enough I can remotely connect to my home desktop running Fedora on the bare metal if I need to quickly compile shit using GCC.
Shut up, retard. The Home and Pro and other normie versions are absolute shit, and packed with a dumb store, creepy voice assistant, and forced updates. It's just the worst fucking OS on the planet. I'd rather use an Android tablet than use a normal edition of Windows 10. There's a reason why a huge chunk of users are staying on 7, and even on XP. Windows 10 is just bad.
My Microsoft Windows 7 Home Edition does not have this problem.
>mfw never "upgraded"
Blame the tech-illiterate retards who never shut down their computer because "I don't want to have to re-open everything again."
This feature is for them.
I'm pretty sure disabling w10's fast boot (or whatever it's called) works.
>w10's fast boot
Isn't it like a hybrid shutdown where instead of stopping all of the services and programs the last kernel state is saved before shutdown, and with this they're just saving app states to disk as well? I know that with the hybrid shutdown on Windows 8.1 and stuff the kernel is sort of frozen in time, and so when you boot up it doesn't have to load as many drivers or other programs or configure itself fully like it normally would, effectively halving the boot time.
Pretty cool stuff if you look at the technical side, though I'm no expert on it.
>Isn't it like a hybrid shutdown where instead of stopping all of the services and programs the last kernel state is saved before shutdown, and with this they're just saving app states to disk as well?
Yes
But not all drivers are compatible with it apparently
My PC would freeze for about a minute, and occasionally would boot to a black screen for about 30 seconds
Disabled that "feature," never had a problem since
For some reason they put the option in control panel, which I find odd since it's a newer feature, which I would expect to go into settings
Install LTSB and you won't have to deal with this shower of shit.
Idk. My problem is that it starts auto playing youtube videos when i am still on the login screen. Wouldnt be happy if u had someone over, turn the computer on, and "the history of traps in anime" starts playing before i can even type my password in
>Macs do this
>But when Windows does it it's bad
I always shut down my programs manually before turning off my computer. I don't want unexpected shit happening regardless.
Win95 has been doing this ffs
KDE seems to do it as well, it's maddening.
I do this too. Really helps in cases where I forget to save something.
Once again Microsoft is copying Linux's decade old homework and still can't even do it right