Firefox, but it was my fault I was switching between open tabs and closing them and ended up closing the last tab...
I downloaded the CABs from a UUP dump as well (via adguard), and the hashes are different. BUT: It's from the "Feature update to Windows 10, 1909" selection, so this might be a little out-of-date. I didn't know that KB-packages are versioned, I always thought that a new KB release gets a new number as well. Never paid attention to it. Never mind, I'm happy on .385 since it seems to be an official ("stable") release, and I don't like to be that much on the bleeding edge.
He said we have no plans, but the point is: in development of Win10, they actually never have any plans
@Enthousiast clear me something here..ofcorse the esd's means they really close be final 19h2 and that awsome news but why in regedit shows 19h1 instead of 19h2 is kind mystake or microsoft choose do it like this? thank you!
Atm, all is very unclear, 10022 now even installs on 18363.356 But we'll see soon enough how all ends up at 19H2/1909.
First, I would like to thank the MDL community for making it easier for me to try out and develop my own release of Windows 10 Enterprise, via NTlite of course. As a general observation of the OS in general, I often feel really deterred by the seemingly endless waves of bad press and privacy scares, just to name a few. I think that the wave of bad press, along with the “all-or-nothing” “take-it-or-else” update woes, are probably significant factors in why I am still stuck with Windows 7 as the main Windows OS, cut-off from the internet with no updates since the spring. I wanted to build a new computer, but I have struggled to make any progress due to the seemingly sad state of Windows 10. My mental health has also deteriorated for reasons outside the scope of MDL, and that has made the case for adopting Windows 10 even harder for me to argue in favour of. It is fortunate that I use macOS and Ubuntu more often, but I miss the days when Windows 7 had just launched, and many knew at the time that Microsoft was learning from most of their mistakes… until Windows 8 and Windows 10 came… and it all went downhill again to such an extent that Windows 7 has become the new XP.