I use W10 on one machine and W7 on another. Because MS has decided to break its own guidelines regarding ethical behavior, by using deceit to cause people to upgrade when they in fact, did not so with, I’m giving folks some articles, a sort of “how to” avoid or undo those actions of MS. Of course that won’t change the fact that new machines will come with W10 on them, and that MS’s other OSs will expire and stop getting support/patching at some point and become more vulnerable to attack.
“The technology giant recently altered the user prompt shown by the Get Windows 10 app to change how the close button works. Clicking X to close the prompt previously dismissed the scheduled upgrade to Windows 10, but Microsoft has changed its action, so clicking X now causes the user to agree to the scheduled upgrade.” – Techrepublic
If you wish to see exactly what I’m talking about, please see this link.
So, “Make Use Of” and c|net (Download.com) have published very recent articles about this topic:
1. c|net: “Stop or roll back a Windows 10 upgrade” - http://download.cnet.com/blog/download-blog/stop-or-roll-back-a-windows-10-update/?ttag=e785&ftag=DLAe1debd4&tag=nl.e785&s_cid=e785&ttag=e785&ftag=TRE410dd70
2. Makeuseof: “How to block the W10 Upgrade, Everything We Know”: http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/block-windows-10-upgrade-everything-know/
So, if you didn’t wish to upgrade to W10, and woke up to a brand new OS, and don’t know how to roll things back, these can be of help. There may be better sources out there about this, so please add them in your comments.
Remember, you have until July 29th to get the upgrade free. After that, it will cost $119.
If it’s a matter of a much needed program not running on W10, there is “compatibility mode” which you can use within the W10 environment to run these programs.
Sources are linked in the post.