Lucho Posted July 6, 2016 Report Posted July 6, 2016 I think that Microsoft edge is giving me a hart time with windows 10. How can I go back to just the plain IE 11 or the newest version? or are we all hooked up with the "Edge"? I was out of the country for six months without any problem, but as soon as I landed back in the US my computer acts very slow or freezes. Firefox is also slow. I downloaded Google Chrome and it made things even worse. I going back to where I was but I prefer to fix it before I leave again the US. Thank you for any idea I can get to fix my problem. Lucho Quote
Jack from Ohio Posted July 6, 2016 Report Posted July 6, 2016 IE does not and cannot exist in WIN10 OS. It is the price for giving in to the bully tactics of Microsoft. Quote
Eric Posted July 6, 2016 Report Posted July 6, 2016 Internet Explorer 11 is there, but they don't make it easy to find. Hit the Start Button (or wherever the search box is now), and in the search box, type "Internet Explorer" When you see the familiar blue 'e' icon in the results, right click it, and pin it to your Task Bar and/or Start Menu 3 Quote
Ringers Posted July 6, 2016 Report Posted July 6, 2016 As Eric said, IE 11 and Chrome both work perfectly in Win 10. Edge has some nice features with being able to set up reading panes for unruly websites and being able to "mark up" internet pages with virtual markers to underline important parts and save them. Edge has some problems with loading some extensions, however, so I do not use it yet but rather defer to IE 11. All of my programs,including ProSeries from 1998 through 2015 and ATX from 1997 through 2012 (my last year with them) all function as perfectly under Win 10 as they did under Win 7 and Win XPS. I run two high-end stand-alone computers in my business as the only employee preparing approximately 400 tax returns and handling the books, payroll filings, and financials for 35 small companies. 5 Quote
Lucho Posted July 7, 2016 Author Report Posted July 7, 2016 On 7/6/2016 at 4:04 PM, Eric said: Internet Explorer 11 is there, but they don't make it easy to find. Hit the Start Button (or wherever the search box is now), and in the search box, type "Internet Explorer" When you see the familiar blue 'e' icon in the results, right click it, and pin it to your Task Bar and/or Start Menu Well I did it. and let see what happens. Thank Eric. Lucho Quote
Roberts Posted July 11, 2016 Report Posted July 11, 2016 Yeah, we have 10 on our home computer and I was able to get IE on my bar at the bottom and essentially eliminate Edge - didn't like it. For work, the wife is required to use IE to log into her office from home and she's never had a problem with it. Windows 10 isn't the death that people act like it is. My older printer / scanner doesn't have a driver that works for 10 but otherwise, no problems. Quote
Randall Posted July 11, 2016 Report Posted July 11, 2016 1 hour ago, Roberts said: Windows 10 isn't the death that people act like it is. My older printer / scanner doesn't have a driver that works for 10 but otherwise, no problems. I tend to agree but I wouldn't update an existing system to W10. When I buy new, I'll go with W10. 3 Quote
Roberts Posted July 11, 2016 Report Posted July 11, 2016 1 hour ago, Randall said: I tend to agree but I wouldn't update an existing system to W10. When I buy new, I'll go with W10. Oh I agree. I haven't updated my computer but I don't think it would destroy it if I did. Quote
BHoffman Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 I bought a new computer with Win 10, and it's a pretty steep learning curve for me. I have used Cox for my email address and Windows Mail forever. Had to buy MS Office Home and Business with Outlook to get that to work. Had to enter my contacts in one at a time. Couldn't transfer my emails over to the new computer. Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how did you like the play? 3 Quote
Don in Upstate NY Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 18 hours ago, Roberts said: Oh I agree. I haven't updated my computer but I don't think it would destroy it if I did. I now have three computers on Win 10. One was originally on Win 7 pro, one on Win 7 home, and one from the Win 2000 days. I also have a "netbook" on Win XP home that I don't know what to do with. Cute little thing, nice keyboard, but it's gutless. Quote
ADGFINANCIAL Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 Don, we have the same, 4 Win10 and one XP Laptop. I'm using the XP Laptop for 2008 and older returns should they come in. Once in a Blue moon they do. So now you know what to do with it. Quote
Randall Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 10 hours ago, BHoffman said: I bought a new computer with Win 10, and it's a pretty steep learning curve for me. I have used Cox for my email address and Windows Mail forever. Had to buy MS Office Home and Business with Outlook to get that to work. Had to enter my contacts in one at a time. Couldn't transfer my emails over to the new computer. Other than that, Mrs. Lincoln, how did you like the play? Did you come from W7 or earlier? I currently have W8.1 so I'm thinking the learning curve won't be as steep. 1 Quote
Abby Normal Posted July 12, 2016 Report Posted July 12, 2016 Just now, Randall said: Did you come from W7 or earlier? I currently have W8.1 so I'm thinking the learning curve won't be as steep. The learning curve from 8.1 to 10 is a lot less steep. BHoffman's issue was MS killed Windows Mail so she had to switch to Outlook. I've been using Thunderbird for a very long time because I hate most Microsoft software and you never know when they're going to kill off their software. Quote
BHoffman Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 I was working with Vista, so this is a whole new experience. Frustration level only reached 10/10 a few times today. 1 Quote
Roberts Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 23 hours ago, Abby Normal said: I've been using Thunderbird for a very long time because I hate most Microsoft software and you never know when they're going to kill off their software. ditto. Thunderbird and their calendar work well for me and have for 10+ years. About 17-18? years ago I had this really old, weak computer and I wanted every software program to be as small as possible to keep it as fast as possible. Dumped everything I could from running in the background and Outlook (or whatever it was called) was massive. I went with The Bat email for a long time because it was the smallest I could find. Same reason I used Opera and Netscape and then Firefox. I still uses FF for some things and Opera for others. Can't remember why I stopped using The Bat, still get a fuzzy feeling about how awesome it was. (seems they charge now - maybe that's why I changed) I dumped MS Office for Open Office about 6 years ago. Love it. Quote
Roberts Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 12 hours ago, BHoffman said: I was working with Vista, so this is a whole new experience. Frustration level only reached 10/10 a few times today. If it's finding things - Classic Shell is a free program that will make win10 look and feel like older versions of Windows. Puts the Start button on your screen! If I recall, Windows now comes with something to makes Classic Shell not required but I'm not 100% sure of that. 2 Quote
Abby Normal Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 57 minutes ago, Roberts said: If it's finding things - Classic Shell is a free program that will make win10 look and feel like older versions of Windows. Puts the Start button on your screen! If I recall, Windows now comes with something to makes Classic Shell not required but I'm not 100% sure of that. All versions of windows have a start button and a menu. And they work better than the old menus, anyway. Change is hard but inevitable. And in this case it's for the better. 2 Quote
Abby Normal Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 49 minutes ago, Roberts said: 8.0 didn't have a start button. It was hidden until you pointed to the upper right corner... or you could just press the start button (WinKey) on your keyboard. Quote
BHoffman Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 I want to join the 21st century and be like the cool kids, so I aim to just get used to the new look and functions. I found "sticky notes" and loving those. They don't cheerfully flutter when the back door opens, but one can't have everything. 4 Quote
Roberts Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 1 hour ago, Abby Normal said: It was hidden until you pointed to the upper right corner... or you could just press the start button (WinKey) on your keyboard. That start button did something very different in 8.0 than the traditional start button. It took you back to the start screen - not the traditional start menu. Quote
Abby Normal Posted July 13, 2016 Report Posted July 13, 2016 13 minutes ago, Roberts said: That start button did something very different in 8.0 than the traditional start button. It took you back to the start screen - not the traditional start menu. The start "screen" was just a full screen menu. Win 10 has the same concept they just made it not full screen. Quote
Randall Posted July 14, 2016 Report Posted July 14, 2016 In W8, if you hit the Windows key + X, you get a nice pop up menu, giving you quick options to just about everything. 1 Quote
GeneInAlabama Posted July 14, 2016 Report Posted July 14, 2016 It works on W10 also. I just tried it and it works. Thanks for the info. 1 Quote
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