Posted on 06/02/2020 12:17:06 PM PDT by dayglored
Compatibility hold slapped on affected kit with fixes in 'upcoming release'
It's only the second week of Windows 10's May 2020 Update and things are going... about as well as one might expect. Which, sadly for Microsoft hardware owners, is not ideal.
The release popped up last week and we noted that it had its issues. Ten, to be precise. The bork count currently stands at 11 and, worryingly for owners of Microsoft's pricey Surface devices, now includes features the company's fancy fondleslabs.
Microsoft is keen to brag about the "Always Connected" nature of its devices but it appears that some have come unstuck with the update. "Compatibility issues" might surface for gear with "more than one Always On, Always Connected capable network adapter" so Microsoft has slammed the brakes on update attempts.
It also admitted that some of the newest products in the Surface line, such as the Pro 7 and Laptop 3, might "receive errors or unexpected shutdown or restart."
The newest OS not working on Microsoft's own hardware is obviously a little awkward. If only there was someone leading both the Windows and Devices groups to ensure the two talked.
Oh wait, there is. Although chief product officer Panos Panay seems to have been a little more preoccupied with creating vaguely toe-curling product launch videos than ensuring the company's carefully crafted hardware can actually run its own equally carefully crafted software.
Even the recent ARM64 release of Visual Studio Code struggled a little as team members waited for a Surface Pro X to arrive in order to test the updated developer darling.
Problems with new releases (or patches) of Windows 10 are hardly without precedent, although after the lessons learned from the deleterious October 2018 Update and the sheer length of time the May 2020 Update (aka 20H1) has spent in testing (as well as Release Preview), one might have hoped that somebody would at least have thought to fire up the update on a spread of Surface kit, but here we are.
The latest issue added to the big pile of delight is the Deployment Image Servicing and Management (DISM) tool reporting corruption after using /restorehealth
to fix things.
Microsoft has wisely placed a block on updates for affected kit for many of these concerns. Fixes are expected in June or in "an upcoming release."
There are ways and means of forcing a Windows 10 May 2020 Update install if it has not been offered via Windows Update, but if you're in the growing crowd of those with compatibility issues we'd have to recommend hanging fire a little longer. ®
can anyone translate any of this into plain english, presuming it is not a satire (sorry to miss the humor if it is)?
at this moment windows installer is overwhelming my disk i/o. it also appears to be monkeying around with my registry (without telling me about it, or telling me about the installer) (of course?)
my applications are grinding to a halt, my internet is getting spotty, i cant watch any videos on chrome (including a radio broadcast over youtube), and my touchpad is going haywire... maybe i’ll unintentionally start sending porn links to my family and friends... courtesy of windows installer and input driver bugs... sure, why not... viva windows10 and the neverending upcoming next bug fix release to end all bug fix releases!
:-(
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