Just took a new machine with a fresh install of Windows 10 Anniversary off the CD I just bought from NewEgg. Windows 10 Home - version 10.1.14393 Build 14393, installed Classic Shell 4.3.0 and it shows the same behavior. It seems the real time event manager is processing both the classic shell start button and the windows 10 start button select click before it releases the classic shell button. Not sure, but it looks like the classic shell button is not replacing the windows 10 start button.
Something I notice that was different installing classic shell on windows 7, 8, and older 10 is that after the install Classic Shell must be initialized with the start menu - programs - classic menu shortcut and select change startup button to even see if it was installed. If you press the default window 10 start button before you initialize classic shell, you get the windows 10 start menu.
After the clam shell icon shows up after initializing it, when you click it once, it will toggle through the classic shell startup menu to the windows 10 startup menu with a second click, but not toggle back to the classic shell menu. I had to click a few times on the task bar or main screen to get the clam shell icon back. During that time the classic shell menu, both left and right click, are missing in action.
I know how hard it is to debug intermittent bugs. I wrote the first talking computer software in 1980 for the blind with Ray Kurtzweil's team in pure machine language, no compiler, just typing in binary code on a running system. Basic, LISP, C, C++, and JAVA are a lot easier to work with.
Stated programming in 1965 at 14 with my dad at Stanford on punch tape. I have been using DOS and debugged the first version of MASM for Microsoft in 1982, debugged the first version of JAVA for Bill Joy and Gibbons in the Sun Bench Mark center to remove array bugs and embed MATHC. Worked with Ellenby at GRiD Systems when he released the first clam shell laptop-the Compass, the first tablet GRIDPad, and the first Motorola base smart phone before 1990. I wrote the first commercially available software for a tablet computer for Jeff Hawkins. He went on to form Palm. Since then I have worked building device drivers for a variety of products.
Now, in my old age I just do some system integration, network design, and fly fish.
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