One of my major peeves. Software always makes my hardware obsolete. You toss perfectly working gear and buy new to stay in the "mainstream".
Oh I know why they shut it off.
No, they still function fine, just like they did out-of-the-box. If you had a Linux or pre-10 Windows machine I bet they see the shares just fine.I have a Netgear Readynas and a Seagate (something) that is only a year and a half old and both are now non functional because of this.
If you enable SMB 1.0 in Windows features (appwiz.cpl), you should be able to get connected with all the security you've had all along. It may be "insecure", but you have to contemplate how many hackers do you have on your LAN.With this update windows no longer sees it.
You can pretty safely say that about anything Microsoft in the grand scheme. Security is mostly something Microsoft applies like spray paint to products that aren't inherently secure. Unfortunately, the same goes for Google, Adobe and Apple.SMB v1 is a security nightmare...
The only way this will get worse is when they decide to meter your use and that is coming. It's part of the Greed equation. Did anyone notice? Win 10 already has the code built in to meter your internet and charge your use by the Gigabyte. Right now it doesn't apply to anyone unless you are using phone hotspot which is billed by your carrier. But I see it happening one day soon where you will pay by the data size processed by your windows OS. Intel may adopt a similar plan by renting you its CPU.
It is more likely a side effect of the mental midgets at Microsoft messing with (deprecating) Homegroups. Then again, maybe it needs a WINS server to find older machines.I did just that after installing 1803, enabled SMB v1 in Programs & Features, but for me at least it just allows me to see an icon for the computers on my LAN in Network Neighborhood. I can't actually browse the Shared contents of my PCs that way. When I double click on a PC, I get the Windows Cannot Access \\PCNAME error. But when I go to Start -> Run -> \\IPADDRESS it works. Must be some sort of DNS issue.
I did a very similar experiment using VNC and discovered that the problem appears to be that Windows 10 IPv6 keeps reasserting itself. I'm pretty sure that I disabled IPv6 on my desktop but when I did a ping, there was no response to a IPv6 address! When I try to ping a computer that has an IPv4 entry for WINS, it pings the IPv6 perversion of the address even if the box itself isn't set up for IPv6. Fracking retards!So I just did a experiment. I RDP'd into my work Desktop, which is still running Windows 7. I cannot access Shares or do an Admin Share on Windows 10 (1709 or 1803) machines using \\PCNAME, it has to be \\IPADDRESS or \\IPADDRESS\C$.