by Suff » 11 Apr 2013, 15:54
Kathy,
I always set my updates to download and notify, never to automatically install. That way I can choose to install them whenever I want but I don't need to wait for them to download.
I'm wondering. If you could not get back in, how did you do your windows restore?
Some updates (especially .net framework), just take a horrendously long time to come in and they don't always spin the hard drive a lot but are actually doing a lot of computation which takes time but doesn't seem to be doing much.
My preference, during updates, is to just leave it. If it hasn't managed to complete in a day or so, then I'll reboot it. The only times I've had to reboot it, the system kicked in, rolled back the update and then it could be done again.
Although and this is important. I always install as many updates as I possibly can before shutting down. I go to the flag in the system tray and tell it to install the updates now. Then when it reboots, it is only installing the updates it could not do whilst windows is running.
I have a feeling that you wound up in the middle of an update which had a system restore in the middle before continuing. You would then have had to restore to a point before the immediate last updates.
As I have my system restore turned off, getting out of an issue is much harder. I prefer not to get into an issue in the first place and I do that by the way that I manage the updates.
Oh and I don't turn my computer off either....
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