I guess we have to agree to disagree. I think its quite easy to install Windows, usually pop in the CD and follow the prompts which a Grandmother can do. Unless you plan on some partitioning which can begin to get complicated such as a dual boot system, I have both OSX and Windows 7 installed on my Macbook Pro, but most people don't do that.expat71NL wrote:Of course you're right about backups. I always have all my files backed up to a local disc and the cloud. What I am saying is that problems are not normally caused by a new version of Windows. They are caused by an incorrect installation process or tweaks that have been made to the computer for various reasons or unwanted programs that people have installed without realizing that they are doing it. These are all problems which will occur if they install the first version of Windows 10 or wait and install the 10th version. The problems are not normally with Microsoft software but with the person or the PC.
My advice is still the same, don't upgrade your version of Windows just because you can, especially if you have a perfectly fine working system at the moment, until the first "stable" version comes out with fixes and patches, usually known as SP1 (Service Pack 1), sit on the sidelines and watch everyone else go through the headaches and hassles that are inevitable...
Sidenote - here are two awesome moments in Windows product release history. Bill Gates will never live the first one down...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... oment.html