Windows 10

Windows 10 is the now unified version of Windows, officially after January 16, 2020. Any newly bought computers should arrive with Windows 10 in it. Unless specially installed, Windows 10 can be reformatted again and again just like Linux Operating System thanks to its use of key certificate (over the OS Key in the past). Hence, if your computer has Windows 10 certificate, do not hesitate to perform reformatting when it is sick.

Windows 10 - Desktop Screen

The thing about Windows 10...

First thing first, I wasn't a fan of Windows since Windows 3.0 (if some of you heard of it). Generally speaking, Windows OS is particularly useful for end-users but not for mid-level operational maintenance. Its greatest strength which is also its weakness is the user-friendly graphical user interface.

Money Buy-In for Basic Necessity

Beyond that, everything is about money buy-in for quality usage. Also, you cannot operate Windows 10 without a proper and paid-version Anti-Malware solutions. There are simply too many malware focusing on Windows 10. The only reason I setup Windows 10 is mainly for customer support (as in, not everyone is on Linux!). Otherwise, I would stay on Debian.

Privacy Concerns

Microsoft has been collecting user experience data aggressively through the Windows 10 operating system. Unless you're tech savvy and is willing to tweak it off every single time when Windows Update is completed, I'm not a great fan of dealing with regedit all the time.

Easy to Facilitate Customers

Well, not everyone is on Linux. That being said, non-technical users are usually exposed to Windows system from the beginning. Like every business folks said: customer is the king. Hence, it's a good reason to explore Windows 10 once in a while.

Getting Started

This section is about creating the USB installer stick for installing Windows 10.

Getting Started

This section is about necessary configurations to be done before releasing Windows 10 to user / deploy to production.

That's all about Windows 10 setup.