Windows 10 could make installing and updating drivers easier than ever
Apparently all hardware makers will benefit from Microsoft’s QA processes (ahem)
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Microsoftis beginning the rollout of changes to the way updates work inWindows 10, with a new system of optional updates now being implemented for drivers which aren’t a compulsory installation.
Bringing in optional updates has been in the works for quite some time, and what Microsoft is doing here – as explained in aTechcommunity blog post– is giving hardware makers a way to deploy drivers as automatic (delivered as normal) or manual (the latter meaning as an optional update).
Microsoft explains: “Driver publishing can be complicated. Optional drivers have various methods of acquisition, which creates confusion. Starting now we are making changes to streamline things a bit.
“All partners will now be able to publish drivers as automatic! This grants access to driver flighting, and gradual rollout. Which will allow Microsoft, and our partners to detect issues earlier and take corrective action if necessary.”
SoWindows 10users will see an Optional Updates area which can be clicked through to, containing drivers that can be manually installed, or simply left alone if the user prefers. Much like things were withWindows 7and 8, of course, which also featured optional updates that could be left aside.
Justification isn’t optional
If a hardware manufacturer wants to choose optional (manual) delivery, they must “explain the business justification for the choice.”
With automatic delivery – which is the default – Microsoft notes that all driver manufacturers will now be able to benefit from “Microsoft’s quality and reliability processes”.
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Which of course sounds like a good idea in theory, but when you look at the way Microsoft’s quality assurance has been going with updates this year – and indeed in 2019 – we’re not sure all that many Windows 10 users are going to be particularly reassured by those words.
Windows 10 has been continually hitting problemswith cumulative updates, damaging Microsoft’s reputation considerably, and indeed activelydamaging user data as we’ve recently seen.
Microsoft concludes its blog post by stating: “We believe that this new effort will enable our collective customers to get the highest quality, and most reliable drivers faster and with less friction.”
ViaBetanews
Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - ‘I Know What You Did Last Supper’ - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).
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