The end is in sight for Windows 10, but Microsoft keeps pushing out fixes

Microsoft continues to apply the electrodes to Windows 10 with an Insider build to deal with single sign-on problems arising from changes made for the European Digital Markets Act and Edge freezing when using Internet Explorer mode.

In December 2023, Microsoft said that one of the ways it'd comply with the Digital Markets Act (DMA) in the European Economic Area (EEA) was to alter how signing into apps on Windows worked.

If a user with a region set to a country in the EEA signed into Windows, the first application they accessed showed a prompt asking the user if they wished to use the credentials used to sign in to Windows.

All those months back, Microsoft promised: "If the user chooses to use the same credentials they used to sign in to Windows, this notice will not appear again."

The company began to roll out the functionality starting in early 2024.

In August, Microsoft admitted the single sign-on (SSO) notice was still prompting too often under Windows 11 when the user was authenticating using a certificate. The same fix has now arrived for Windows 10 for both Release Preview and Beta Channels.

It's almost as if Windows 10 and 11 were the same thing, just with the latter having a curvier user interface and a set of hardware requirements that necessitate purchasing new hardware.

The latest Insider build update is understandably lighter in features than its Windows 11 stablemate. After all, a little more than a year is left before Microsoft pulls the plug on Windows 10 support for most users. Still, there are some fixes for the army of users still running the doomed operating system.

Windows freezing when customers use File Explorer and the taskbar, media playback issues, and Microsoft Edge ceasing to respond in Internet Explorer mode are among the resolutions.

While such a browser crash might be maddening for administrators trying to support legacy web applications in a corporate environment, Edge's apparent tendency to ignore any further requests when forced into IE mode is more than understandable as Microsoft ended support for IE in June 2022. ®

Search
About Us
Website HardCracked provides softwares, patches, cracks and keygens. If you have software or keygens to share, feel free to submit it to us here. Also you may contact us if you have software that needs to be removed from our website. Thanks for use our service!
IT News
Sep 19
LinkedIn started harvesting people's posts for training AI without asking for opt-in

You'll have to opt out if you don't like it - EU and a few others excepted

Sep 18
California governor goes on AI law signing spree, but demurs on the big one

Newsom still worried about SB 1047's 'chilling effect' on AI industry tax dollar revenue innovation in California

Sep 18
Microsoft unveils Office LTSC 2024 for users that remain stubbornly offline

What do you mean you don't want Copilot and Microsoft 365 services?

Sep 18
Microsoft, BlackRock form fund to sink up to $100B into AI infrastructure

Tech is going to need datacenters and power sources, and a lot of 'em

Sep 18
Open source maintainers underpaid, swamped by security, and going gray

AI-coded contributions? Most would rather skip the bot's work

Sep 18
UK pensions department's project to unite government ERP systems comes to £1.9B

Four branches attempt to streamline HR and business processes

Sep 18
The case for handcrafted software in a mass-produced world

Part 2 As AI automates programming, it could be worth exploring the value of bespoke code