Added 24hr Temp Urls for 19043.928 IP Techbench EnterpriseVL ISOs: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...2-21h1-vb_release.80763/page-355#post-1655803
like it or not donmiller, EPs for current & future Win10 releases are here to stay ...and that's just MY opinion, heh! nope. 20H2 and 21H1 use different EPs
Added 19043.928 EnterpriseVL x64 (x86 added, thanks to @luzea ) checksums: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...2-21h1-vb_release.80763/page-355#post-1655803 Added 24hr temp urls for Client too
Just curious, do the new 19043.928 IP Techbench ISO's have the latest Edge browser or the Legacy version? TIA
Thanks, however, I don't think this will be effective any longer (at least not much), as they want to get old Edge off of the systems. It is a hard replace without asking. We need a Windows 10 E for Europe.
@Enthousiast Update OP "Official 20H2 MCT [Now Downloading (19042.572) ESD's] Aug. 19. 2020" Now "Official 20H2 MCT [Now Downloading (19042.572) ESD's] Oct. 08. 2020"
It's not really a big issue about whether I like or dislike EPs. It's a problem when MSFT releases preview EPs. 19043 is currently a preview EP. If Windows 10 19041 or 19042 is installed, and you apply the 19043 EP, then Windows Update ceases to work unless you are in a Beta or Release-Preview channel. The only way to officially get in those channels is to have an MSFT account and sign-up with the "Windows Insider Program". I've seen the registry hacks to change update channels and they don't always work. Another strategy is to apply the 19043 EP and then roll-back to 19042, download the Windows Updates, and then reapply the 19043 EP. That works as long as Windows 10 does not spontaneously perform component store cleanup, and Windows 10 will do that every 30 days (or what seems unpredictably). So it's the preview EPs that can provide issues.