Has anyone used this yet, I've heard a few reports thats its still got bugs and is slow
Has anyone used this yet, I've heard a few reports thats its still got bugs and is slow
Turning BitLocker off on C turns it off for all drives. Google Drive deleted my files on my PC local drive during their migration to My Drive, as far as I know there was no warning, files just vaporized to cloud.
IIRC, the guy that wrote this, it was in the local paper, had another article later that said there was a difference between home and pro versions of 11 also and things had to be done differently. Some, I think, were saying you couldn't get rid of it for good but not sure on that.
My experiences with Onedrive and with the Microsoft registration (I still can't sign in with my user and password as it says they aren't valid, even though I have recovered and changed them several times and it just happens again later on) has me convinced I would never trust them to unencrypt all my files they had encrypted. I also don't trust them not to turn it back on during an update as they do stuff like that all the time. The last update has Edge browser constantly opening on it's own again, although I use Firefox. I even found they had put it in the startup file so was running all the time in the background.
I have Win 11 Pro. I use Chrome and it stays on, unless I link from an MS program, then it turns to Edge.
Have you looked at task manager to see if Edge is running in the background all the time?
If one is concerned about relying on OneDrive and/or maintaining a Microsoft account, then one can create a local account on a Windows 10 or 11 computer & log in locally. No cloud account or Microsoft account needed.
If one is concerned about losing access to files on an encrypted drive -and- one doesn't want to use Dropbox, Google Drive, or any other cloud service, then one probably is best storing their files on a FAT32 or exFAT formatted external or internal drive or partition and then using a robocopy type of backup solution to keep it in sync. Where I worked, we used a robocopy type of product to sync and backup hundreds of millions of customer files.
Early in OneDrive history - back when it was called Mesh or SkyDrive - I used to sync all my critical files to OneDrive/Mesh/Skydrive, and also robocopy them off to a locally network drive in a date-based YYYY/MM hierarchy, which I kept for decades. That way I had an off-site copy accessible from anywhere in the world, and a local copy's that I could use to go back to a point in time and recover old files -- decades old, actually. The cloud copy was a protection against my house getting torched or destroyed, and the local copies were protection against accidental deletion, corruption, or ransomware.
There are commercial backup products, by they likely have the disadvantage of being proprietary - you need their software in order to recover your files. Fat32/exFAT formatted drives are universally readable.
This is horrible advice. The person who wrote it is a troglodyte. The cold Minnesota winters must have gotten to him.
If your hard drive fails you are screwed anyway. You can recover your data but it is like recovering a stolen car that has been lived in by a crack addict for a year. You really don't want it back. Backup your drives.
Disc encryption is a safe and proven method of securing all your data. Keep the key in multiple places. I use a USB drive to store keys, and store it in a safe deposit box.
One of my PC's has Windows 11. It's working well, no issues.
Why does anyone want to waste time logging in to a home PC everytime they want to use it?