So you'll go as far as to mess with the windows registries files on windows 7 to get it to do what you want, but you won't do something as simple as disabling a useless startup application to reduce your boot time with Windows 10? No wonder why you "shake your head" when you hear that people are booting faster with Windows 10. It's as if you are trying to skew the results to fit your bias.
My home system is not what is in comparison here. The system here is a box stock system. Nothing changed. Box stock installation. Nothing changed. Boht OEM installations are complete. Nothing changed.
Am I saying it badly? I must be doing something wrong. Would someone please review what I have said and tell me where I went wrong? I am pretty sure I have said it a few times. Nothing has changed in the default configurations of BOTH systems.
<snip>I don't understand why they are fighting the update so much since Windows 10 is so much better than 7 in every way.
I have not found Windows 10 to be any better than Windows 7 in my applications. My main issue with Windows 10 are the issues I have had to deal with which seem silly to me. Like how it suddenly would not allow us to access a share drive until we changed the name of the computer. This was after a recent update. There are other things, but that was the latest.
Or how it suddenly will update and reboot in the middle of your work. Just have to make sure nothing is running when not at the computer.
Personally I detest the telemetry data they are stealing in Windows 10. Overall, I do not see a benefit to Windows 10. At least, in my applications.
I know one day the issues will subside and it will be as bug free as Windows 7. They probably will get there faster than they did with Windows 7. That is not to say Windows 7 does not have any issues. It does. They are just smaller and less intrusive right now.
Anyway, I am still collating and monitoring it.
Boot time comparisons are hard to nail down unless you have the same hardware. I am still digging for data on this.