Most likely it's specified by the publisher. kb3197954 first was Insider and now it's revised and publicly published. Drew84, in his overview, also clearly mentions if a kb is insider or general. And non insiders can also use the insider Kb's.
KB3197099 = old revision 319 files cloudap.dll and ngcsvc.dll current revision files cloudap.dll and ngcsvc.dll is 321 KB3197099 included not.
By the way i have still KB3176937 in my Dynamic Update folder. I checked Microsoft Catalog website and it says KB3176937 is not replaced by any update. Do you also still use this update or am i missing something ?
Last week when i did an upgrade from 7, i also saw it still being downloaded (when check for updates is "on").
Yeah you are right Enthousiast I visited KB3176937 support page and it says "[FONT="]This update makes improvements to ease the upgrade experience to Windows 10 Version 1607."[/FONT]
I may be mistaken but I was under the impression that KB3176935 & 37 were superseded by previous? and current CU however files included in KB3176935 have now been upgraded by the release of KB3194623 ... no need for KB3176937 ......maybe an upgrade from windows 7 thing?
@abbodi... the point I was trying to make was... If you are integrating updates into a virgin 14393.0 image KB3176937 (Superseded by CU) is not needed, currently all that is actually needed is: KB3199986 SS KB3201860 FP for IE (If using IE) KB3197954 CU KB3199389 DU_IM(S) KB3194623 DU for BW+REW
In Windows 10 the only updates needed are the current updates. Windows 10 does not work like Windows 7. Windows 7 needs thousands of updates with a clean install, and could take you several days to complete.
Finally they corrected the bug concerning certain USB mouses which cause a hang during upgrade to 1607. We had to wait about 3 months! The only advice on answers.microsoft.com is to run a sfc /scannow...