Alright, so I was previously running Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit) and had a myriad of hardware failures so I bit the bullet and just built a new rig. Everything went just fine, right up until I realized that, duh, the Home Premium edition tops out at 16GB of usable RAM. And of course I'd purchased 32GB of RAM for the new system.
So, knowing that I'd need to purchase a full version of Windows to get the most use out of that new RAM, and knowing that I'll eventually have to upgrade to Windows 10 anyway, I did the free upgrade, just to make sure all of my software/hardware worked in the new OS.
I'm using a Focusrite Saffire Pro 40 (FireWire) interface, and it didn't work in Windows 10. The Focusrite website stated that the Texas Instruments OHCI IEEE 1394 driver is best suited for the interface, so when I looked in my device manager I saw that it was a VIA driver. I've searched high-and-low for the Texas Instruments driver online and can't find anything. I ran the OHCI Tool as recommended by the Focusrite website, and according to the utility it said my driver was available. (For the record, my new board didn't have a FireWire port or header, so I'd purchased a PCI-E FireWire card, which I'm using now.)
So I bumped back to Windows 7 and now everything works again.
The way I see it, my options are as follows:
1) Keep my Saffire Pro 40 and somehow find a way to get FireWire to work in Windows 10 so I can eventually upgrade to Pro and take advantage of the full 32GB of RAM I have installed.
2) Dump my Saffire Pro 40 and get a USB interface such as the Scarlett 18i20. (Focusrite has confirmed that the new thunderbolt Clarett doesn't work in Windows 10, which is kinda crummy because if one is going to upgrade an interface, thunderbolt seems the way to go!)
3) Ditch Focusrite and get another thunderbolt interface that is supported in Windows 10. (And find a thunderbolt card that's compatible with my board, the ASUS Z170-AR, which only has a thunderbolt header, not a port. The Asus-made thunderbolt card strangely doesn't list the Z170 as being compatible.)
4) Forget about upgrading to Windows 10 Pro, stay where I am in Windows 7 Home Premium where everything works as it should, and just bemoan my idiocy for purchasing 32GB of RAM when I can only use 16 of it.
I do have Windows 10 running on a secondary computer (no multimedia stuff, strictly an office-type workstation) and while I do prefer the feel of Windows 7, I don't have any serious gripes with it. So I'd prefer to go to Windows 10 Pro, but right now that isn't an option since my DAW isn't much of a DAW without a functional audio interface. :(
I'm all ears, folks. If you've run into similar issues or have any insights, I welcome your input.