A
AnthonyGiorgianni1
Guest
Sorry to post outside the the thread (My biggest problem is that once I post to Microsoft Community, I can never find the thread again, even if I search by my name or the thread title. I get email responses, but if I respond to them, they get rejected. If anyone responds with the original thread, if anyone can find it, I'll report there.)
But I wanted to thank Juliana and BulldogXX for replying to my recent post "Stop Windows 10 from updating ever?"
To Juliana, in response to your suggestion, which was:
To disable Windows updates follow the step below.
1.Click the Windows + R keys
2.In the Run type: services.msc
3.Search for Windows Update and double-click
4.In startup type, switch to Disabled
5. Click on Apply then on Ok
6.Restart the computer.)
It didn't work.
Any other ideas? I lost work yet again when I walked away from the computer and it tried to update while I was away and then blue screened (see below)
To BulldogXX (see your response below)
What you are saying makes sense in theory. But Windows is now updating and then restarts and blue screens, and I have to roll back (using RollbackRx) to before the update and go through the process again and again and again. Yesterday, I walked away form the computer and it restarted. Not only did it come back as blue screen, but I lost a major piece of work I spent hours on!!! It already has tried to update three times today.
I may be in the minority, but that doesn't make sense to me. I never saw Windows 10 advertised as having mandatory updates that don't work or that cause blue screens,. I do have Vista on my old Toshiba. And it was so problem-free. Interesting, I have another Thinkpad W530. And it can't update either. They same goes with my wife's Lenovo and my friend's Dell latops. They don't blue screen, but the updates fail. And the thing is you have to wait while the update tries. It is such a waste of time.
Microsoft really advertised that this would happen? If so, I'm surprised anyone opted for Win 10.
(BulldogXX's original response
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]While Windows 10 was in development, Microsoft publicized the ways it would be different from all earlier versions of Windows, and this was widely discussed in the media at the time. One of the most important differences was in the way updates would work.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]All earlier versions of Windows consisted of a finished operating system that would be updated over time to fix problems as they were discovered and add security protection. By contrast, Windows 10 consists of a continuous stream of updates that build the operating system. The updates are the operating system. As a result, updating is critical to Windows 10, which is why Microsoft works hard to see that they are delivered.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]I'm sorry that you weren't aware of this when you got Windows 10, but it's never been a secret. Windows 10 is behaving exactly as advertised - you just don't like it that way. Published 'solutions' for stopping updates do so by interfering with the operating system, which has its own consequences.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]Your choices are to stay with Windows 10 or to use something else. But I think you'll find that more and more software is being built this way, because it makes sense.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]Thanks again to you both.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]Anthony Giorgianni[/COLOR]
Continue reading...
But I wanted to thank Juliana and BulldogXX for replying to my recent post "Stop Windows 10 from updating ever?"
To Juliana, in response to your suggestion, which was:
To disable Windows updates follow the step below.
1.Click the Windows + R keys
2.In the Run type: services.msc
3.Search for Windows Update and double-click
4.In startup type, switch to Disabled
5. Click on Apply then on Ok
6.Restart the computer.)
It didn't work.
Any other ideas? I lost work yet again when I walked away from the computer and it tried to update while I was away and then blue screened (see below)
To BulldogXX (see your response below)
What you are saying makes sense in theory. But Windows is now updating and then restarts and blue screens, and I have to roll back (using RollbackRx) to before the update and go through the process again and again and again. Yesterday, I walked away form the computer and it restarted. Not only did it come back as blue screen, but I lost a major piece of work I spent hours on!!! It already has tried to update three times today.
I may be in the minority, but that doesn't make sense to me. I never saw Windows 10 advertised as having mandatory updates that don't work or that cause blue screens,. I do have Vista on my old Toshiba. And it was so problem-free. Interesting, I have another Thinkpad W530. And it can't update either. They same goes with my wife's Lenovo and my friend's Dell latops. They don't blue screen, but the updates fail. And the thing is you have to wait while the update tries. It is such a waste of time.
Microsoft really advertised that this would happen? If so, I'm surprised anyone opted for Win 10.
(BulldogXX's original response
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]While Windows 10 was in development, Microsoft publicized the ways it would be different from all earlier versions of Windows, and this was widely discussed in the media at the time. One of the most important differences was in the way updates would work.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]All earlier versions of Windows consisted of a finished operating system that would be updated over time to fix problems as they were discovered and add security protection. By contrast, Windows 10 consists of a continuous stream of updates that build the operating system. The updates are the operating system. As a result, updating is critical to Windows 10, which is why Microsoft works hard to see that they are delivered.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]I'm sorry that you weren't aware of this when you got Windows 10, but it's never been a secret. Windows 10 is behaving exactly as advertised - you just don't like it that way. Published 'solutions' for stopping updates do so by interfering with the operating system, which has its own consequences.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]Your choices are to stay with Windows 10 or to use something else. But I think you'll find that more and more software is being built this way, because it makes sense.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]Thanks again to you both.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 1)]Anthony Giorgianni[/COLOR]
Continue reading...