Earlier today, Microsoft released KB 4501375, which brings Win10 1903 up to build 18362.207. As usual, the second monthly cumulative update is conside
[See the full post at: Microsoft (finally) posts its second monthly update for Win10 1903 – but the vanishing Update advanced options remains a mystery]
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Microsoft (finally) posts its second monthly update for Win10 1903 – but the vanishing Update advanced options remains a mystery
Home » Forums » Newsletter and Homepage topics » Microsoft (finally) posts its second monthly update for Win10 1903 – but the vanishing Update advanced options remains a mystery
- This topic has 39 replies, 17 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 8 months ago.
Tags: KB 4501375
AuthorTopicwoody
ManagerJune 27, 2019 at 8:20 pm #1861405Viewing 17 reply threadsAuthorReplies-
anonymous
GuestJune 27, 2019 at 10:42 pm #1861421For us – besides being not declared business ready of course – the dissappearing update-settings are a clear no go for 1903. Sadly enough though, a gloomy message appeared this week at the update-panel. It states our machines are running a version of Windows 10 (1803) that very soon will run out of support and needs to be updated. Running Pro at the semi annual channel with 365 days deferral for feature updates. So guess we will soon be pushed to 1903 unfortunately. That would mean the end of using Windows as main workstations here, but so be it. Better switch now then run into deep trouble in the totally unpredictable and unprofessional world of Windows 10. :-/
1 user thanked author for this post.
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mn–
AskWoody LoungerJune 28, 2019 at 12:05 am #1861448It states our machines are running a version of Windows 10 (1803) that very soon will run out of support and needs to be updated
Yeah, funny how some systems still haven’t been offered anything newer than 1803… like that one brand new laptop I just unboxed last week, even with repeated bouncing on the seeker button with deferrals at 0.
I mean, would asking for some consistency be too much, really…?
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Alex5723
AskWoody PlusJune 28, 2019 at 1:52 am #1861498So guess we will soon be pushed to 1903 unfortunately.
You don’t need to. Just update to 1809 and get some breathing air until EOL May 11, 2021.
1 user thanked author for this post.
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doriel
AskWoody LoungerJune 28, 2019 at 2:23 am #1861508I somehow really do not understand, what that “end of support” means. Does it mean, that you wont flooded with updates? Will MS Defender be updated after support period ends?
-see screenshot e-o-l.jpgIf it means, that there will be no more updates for 1803 and defender’s virus definitions will be updated anyway, I am willing to take the risk.
Maybe vanishing updates is not bug, but new feature – you set it once, you set it foreva.
But still, this setiings can be done manually by group politics in “gpedit.msc”Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Windows Update
– see screenshot defer.jpg
My WSUS is doing great job, blocking all I say to block 🙂
Some more settings are done in “regedit” too..HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\
Windows\WindowsUpdate-see screenshot wsus.jpg (my situation)
-see screenshot how-to.jpg – manually enter these values to defer updatesI think its not fair to force people to mess with their computers like Microsoft does. The number of bugs in this hlaf-baked OS is increasing and users are experiencing freezed computers, lost data and serious breakdowns during updates. I know its not easy to create OS, all credits to Microsoft for their hard work, but nobody wanted this chaos or update every week.. They chose themself. It looks good on paper, but reality is much much worse.
Dell Latitude 3420, Intel Core i7 @ 2.8 GHz, 16GB RAM, W10 22H2 Enterprise
HAL3000, AMD Athlon 200GE @ 3,4 GHz, 8GB RAM, Fedora 29
PRUSA i3 MK3S+
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This reply was modified 5 years, 8 months ago by
doriel. Reason: too long line with registers
1 user thanked author for this post.
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This reply was modified 5 years, 8 months ago by
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anonymous
GuestJune 28, 2019 at 7:54 pm #1861894The general idea was here to skip 1809, but Microsoft seems to not appreciate that very much. Oh well, the first Mac’s are happily running here, along with some test Linux Mint machines. Especially the Mac’s are a revelation, no more update- and upgrade stress. Linux Mint is also fine, but has the disadvantage of not being able to run MS Office. The big question now is: do we REALLY need that, or will Libre Office be a good replacement on those machines? For now it looks ok, but we might run into problems. The future will tell. For sure is though, that Windows is on it’s final way out here. Really way too much troubles and wasted time since version 10. Maybe nice for some home users and gamers, but it’s not designed for professional use. Neither are the useless forced upgrades that besides lost time only at simplistic features that for no other modern OS would require a reinstall.
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Alex5723
AskWoody PlusJuly 2, 2019 at 2:14 am #1864989I somehow really do not understand, what that “end of support” means. Does it mean, that you wont flooded with updates? Will MS Defender be updated after support period ends?
Yes, both security updates and Defender updates will cease.
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abbodi86
AskWoody_MVPJune 28, 2019 at 12:09 am #1861449As i saw someone theory, i think the vanishing deferral settings might be related to the removal of semi-annual channel (targeted)
maybe some programming contradiction
even in group policy, we get the option to choose between “Semi-Annual Channel” and “Semi-Annual Channel (Targeted) for 1809 and below (Deprecated)”
but under the hood, both options refrence the same registry value"BranchReadinessLevel"=dword:00000010
1 user thanked author for this post.
Alex5723
AskWoody PlusJune 28, 2019 at 2:01 am #1861505but the vanishing Update advanced options remains a mystery
I think the it won’t come back as it is a deliberate move by Microsoft to force updates/upgrades.
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anonymous
Guest -
PKCano
Manager
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Fred
AskWoody LoungerJune 28, 2019 at 3:04 am #1861530Windows 10 v.1803 (home) gets another cumulative update dd.june 26, kb4497398 ; updates to build.17134.860
I don’t have a clue what exactly is patched, that is still very secret,
this update was not offered by windows itself, but I had strange memory problems with my screen & background apps…… these problems seems to be better after the uodate
or is that wishfull thinking?* _ ... _ *-
woody
ManagerJune 30, 2019 at 8:41 pm #1863303KB 4509478– the third June cumulative update for Win10 1809, released last Wednesday June 26 – is a “silver bullet” patch. It only exists to fix the bug introduced in the May third-monthly cumulative update, and continuing in the June first and second cumulative updates (got that?), which screwed up iSCSI on some machines.
This appears to be the same bug I warned about on June 19, which Dell announced – and Microsoft hadn’t acknowledged until very recently.
Looks like 1703, 1709, 1803 and 1809 all got the same silver bullet patch. See @Alex5723’s post.
Alex5723
AskWoody PlusJune 28, 2019 at 3:48 am #1861534Windows 10 v.1803 (home) gets another cumulative update dd.june 26, kb4497398 ; updates to build.17134.860
I don’t have a clue what exactly is patched, that is still very secret,
this update was not offered by windows itself, but I had strange memory problems with my screen & background apps…… these problems seems to be better after the uodate
or is that wishfull thinking?glnz
AskWoody Plus-
Barry
AskWoody LoungerJune 28, 2019 at 4:07 pm #1861827I have 1903. Has anyone tried KB 4501375? Does it impair your PC?
(I understand it fixes the Event Viewer problem and would like to fix that at least.)
Thanks.
I installed it yesterday(i had to manually install the SSU update) No apparent problems.
Barry
Windows 11 v23H2 -
anonymous
GuestJune 30, 2019 at 2:44 pm #1863134I installed it on a clean 1903 install.
I noticed that after this update, when viewing CPU frequencies using HWMonitor, HWInfo, or CPU-z, the bus speeds seem to decrease from 100Mhz to ~97-98Mhz. Thus, my min and max CPU frequencies (previously 800Mhz to 4300 Mhz) now decreased to 792Mhz to 4290Mhz.
MikeMc
AskWoody LoungerJune 28, 2019 at 12:05 pm #1861638It appears that Microsoft’s update system is messed up. I recently did a fresh install of 1809 on most of my computers. On two of them, a laptop and a tablet, the Store app downloads 12-15 updates whenever I do a check. After the apps are download and ‘installed’, the Recent Actively show no changes. Sounds just like 1903’s Windows Update system.
It appears that Microsoft is no longer capable of looking at your system’s installed software and then providing the necessary updates. Perhaps it’s time for someone at Microsoft to find a new…
anonymous
GuestJune 28, 2019 at 12:20 pm #1861639FWIW, I’m on Win 10 1903 Home. This morning I got the .NET cumulative update automatically and got the option to download and install the 1903 cumulative update. After the install and restart, I checked the updates menu again and saw that the 1903 cumulative update was listed again as an optional download and install. After some cursing that this would be three months straight having to install the cumulative update twice, I clicked download and install and after a brief checking for updates, it said I was up to date. So it didn’t install twice although it appeared as an optional update twice.
I’ve been on 1903 for two weeks and haven’t noticed any issues and so far no issues with the cumulative update other than it being offered twice, but thankfully only installed once.
1 user thanked author for this post.
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anonymous
GuestJune 28, 2019 at 1:32 pm #1861707replying to: anonymous = FWIW
The exact same thing and same sequence happened to me as well. I also am still having no problems with 1903 (now build xxxxx.207) and first installed it on 06/09/2019. And I never click on “Check for Updates” and have nothing deferred. I also am not an “insider” nor a “seeker.” Keeping my fingers crossed.
CraigS26
AskWoody PlusJune 28, 2019 at 2:53 pm #1861786FWIW, I’m on Win 10 1903 Home. This morning I got the .NET cumulative update automatically and got the option to download and install the 1903 cumulative update. After the install and restart, I checked the updates menu again and saw that the 1903 cumulative update was listed again as an optional download and install. After some cursing that this would be three months straight having to install the cumulative update twice, I clicked download and install and after a brief checking for updates, it said I was up to date. So it didn’t install twice although it appeared as an optional update twice.
I’ve been on 1903 for two weeks and haven’t noticed any issues and so far no issues with the cumulative update other than it being offered twice, but thankfully only installed once.
I can confirm a 2nd offering of KB4501375 AFTER its Install and Re-Start — and Clk’ing Chk for Updates netted “You’re Up to date” and no 2nd download. I had a 1st attempt Install problem WU acknowledged with an Update Page Notice and a suggested Re-Start spinning-arrow lasted so long I did a hard Power Off and tried again successfully on 2nd attempt.
I inst’d the 6/27 “1903” Svc Stack manually as suggested (& 4.8 Net Frmwk WU offered) yesterday. KB4501375 appeared as Pending Dnload when I clk’d Update & Security today.
W10 Pro 22H2 / Hm-Stdnt Ofce '16 C2R / Macrium Pd vX / GP=2 + FtrU=Semi-Annual + Feature Defer = 1 + QU = 0
_Reassigned Account
AskWoody LoungerJune 29, 2019 at 7:00 am #1862222I don’t place much faith in Windows anymore, Microsoft pretty much deems it a legacy platform they reluctantly have to continue to maintain and support. They basically have removed themselves from even talking about Windows anymore which is the writing on the wall. When I get cumulative updates and feature updates I just cross fingers and hope for the best these days.
CraigS26
AskWoody PlusJune 29, 2019 at 7:36 am #1862224gHacks Martin B on 6/27: [ KB4501375 is – considered a – Preview Update – , not a final update. It should Not be installed on production machines but is suitable for testing purposes.
Woody 6/27: [ You’ll only get this patch if you click “Check for updates” (which, of course, you never do), or if you download and install it manually. If you do install it manually, be sure to first install the new Servicing Stack Update, KB 4506933.]
Per (2) anonymous 6/28 12:20 & 1:32 & Me —- On 6/28 IT WAS THERE as – Pending Download – when I clk’d the – Update & Security – Page, so – does MS show “Preview” Updates as a Pending Dnload – OR – might the Status have changed in one day? Confused…..
W10 Pro 22H2 / Hm-Stdnt Ofce '16 C2R / Macrium Pd vX / GP=2 + FtrU=Semi-Annual + Feature Defer = 1 + QU = 0
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PKCano
Manager
CraigS26
AskWoody PlusJune 29, 2019 at 9:50 am #1862283With Home Edition, you should be using Metered Connections and wushowhide to stop the download/install. That is your only defense unless you use a third-party Update blocker.
With Macrium images I haven’t backed-off from W10 Updates since Feb new HP and haven’t had but the one issue where (2 ) 6/28 Cum Update Install attempts were requd.
I’m just trying to clarify IF the Pending Cum Update I saw / Inst’d yesterday was Still the Preview – I would expect MS to show a “Release” Update as Pending, Not “Preview”. Remember, I just clk’d Updates & Security, Not Chk For, and There it was – and for the (2) anonymous post-ers I ref’d, too..
W10 Pro 22H2 / Hm-Stdnt Ofce '16 C2R / Macrium Pd vX / GP=2 + FtrU=Semi-Annual + Feature Defer = 1 + QU = 0
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This reply was modified 5 years, 8 months ago by
CraigS26.
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PKCano
ManagerJune 29, 2019 at 10:20 am #1862294Cumulative Updates released on Patch Tuesday (2nd Tues = B week) are Security updates. Anything released on C, D, or E (or even A) week is a non-Security patch, in other words, a Preview.
These are not usually pushed through Windows Update and are usually manual download/install (or thrrough WSUS for businesses) for testing purposes. Or they are intentionally sought after by “Seekers” clicking on “Check for updates’.” The non-Security patches are rolled into the next month’s Patch Tues Security update.
However, with Microsoft, these days, who knows anymore.
anonymous
GuestJune 29, 2019 at 1:41 pm #1862358Replying to PJCano:
The point is that both he and we (the two anon’s) were offered the updates in question WITHOUT clicking on “Check for Updates.” They were already there when navigating to the Windows Update page. Sometimes, with version 1903, just pulling up that page automatically initiates “Check for Updates” without even clicking on the square. When I first navigated to the update and security page after booting up my laptop, the dot net update and the preview cumulative update were already referenced and highlighted, the first one ready for download and the second one asking to be downloaded and installed. Since this laptop never has any issues or problems with Windows 10 versions, upgrades, or updates, and since it is basically a spare pc for me (my other laptop and two desktops all run Windows 7 x64 sp1 fully updated), I just go ahead and act as the guinea pig, while keeping strategically timed Macrium images along the way. So far, no problems (fingers crossed).
HP-Omen 7th Generation Intel Core i7 7700HQ w/128 Gb Sandisk SSD 8 Gb RAM and 1 Tb fixed disk for data, and Windows 10 Home (originally version 1709 factory install). No servers, no gaming, no Office.
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PKCano
ManagerJune 29, 2019 at 1:51 pm #1862363the dot net update and the preview cumulative update were already referenced and highlighted, the first one ready for download and the second one asking to be downloaded and installed
This is not clear to me.
Usually with Home Edition, updates don’t sit there ready for download (and not downloading) unless you have Metered connections. set. For the first one you mentioned (referenced and highlighted, ready for download), did you turn off metered connections to initiate download?
And in Home, updates don’t “ask to be downloaded and installed” unless they are in the new section of updates listing available updates. Was the second update thus waiting, in the new “downlosd and install now” section and you had to agree to download and install?
If these two cases are true, that is a lot different than the updates being force installed on your PC. You would have to have made changes to allow the installation. Is that the case?
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anonymous
GuestJune 29, 2019 at 6:45 pm #1862439Replying to PKCano (got it right this time):
I have never had metered connections set, have no reason to do so. This laptop works just fine with every version of Windows 10, beginning with 1709, which it came with brand new. The dot-Net cumulative update was already waiting for me to click on the download square when I navigated to the update page and without clicking on “check for updates.” The second update, the cumulative (preview) update was listed underneath or below the first with, as you say, the words suggesting that I “download and install now.” I clicked on download for the first update; and it downloaded and installed and then required a reboot to finish. When I returned to the update page, the cumulative preview update still said “download and install now.” I clicked on the square and it downloaded and installed and required a reboot to finish. I haven’t changed anything in version 1903 since it was installed on 6/9/2019 and have never clicked on “check for updates” and have never had metered connections set, nor am I a “seeker” or an “insider.” This is just the way version 1903 has been working since it was installed; and I didn’t click on “check for updates” to get it, either. It was just offered on 1809 on June 9th without doing anything to prompt it. These are all Home editions of Windows 10.
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abbodi86
AskWoody_MVPJune 30, 2019 at 10:03 pm #1863347Based on my tests with UUP dump api, KB4501375 (18362.207) behave exactly like how the Feature Update behave on 1809 and 1803 (i.e. “download and install now.” behavior)
meaning, it will be bundled and offered as secondary update (without seeking) with any available update (or probably just the latest general CU or .NET CU)
https://uupdump.ml/fetchupd.php?arch=x86&ring=retail&build=18362.1&sku=48unfortunately, UUP api cannot handle or recognize .NET updates, otherwise i would be able to verify if KB4502584 is offered with seeking or not
that being said, defering Feature Updates (even for 1 day) will make KB4501375 (18362.207) goes away
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kwerboom
AskWoody LoungerJune 30, 2019 at 2:57 pm #1863160-
PKCano
ManagerJune 30, 2019 at 3:07 pm #1863173We’ve been discussing the disappearing deferral settings in 1903 Windows Update Advanced settings since v1903 was issued.
Microsoft has not recognized it as yet, and no one knows if it’s intended or if it’s a bug. It’s too early to move to v1903.
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kwerboom
AskWoody Lounger
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anonymous
GuestJune 30, 2019 at 6:20 pm #1863213Windows 10 Pro 1803, 2 machines, one originally Windows 8 Pro, the other always 10 but pre 1803. Both have been set to defer updates for a long time: features 365, quality 30 days. Altered both to 0 in both machines, then upgraded both machines to 1903. Both still showing both defer updates; [happy]; on both machines set features to 30, left quality at 0; did a few Check for updates and it did a few updates. At some time after that and the next day or so, the defer updates had vanished. To say it again, after upgrade to 1903 defer updates was present, but after a while it vanished. On an earlier third 1803 pro machine where I neglected to alter 365 and 30 to 0 and 0 before upgrading to 1903, the vanishing also occurred, BUT I did see them non-vanished, only for just a short while (minutes) right after the final automatic boot during 1903 upgrade but before the upgrading had fully completed its work – in this instance I’m reasonably sure they vanished without me having done Check for updates; on this third machine, at first I thought maybe I had imagined I’d seen the defer updates settings were still exposed, and was quite messed up mentally [not to mention angry] when they went away all by themselves.
1 user thanked author for this post.
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woody
ManagerJune 30, 2019 at 8:54 pm #1863323I’m thinking of giving the weird 1903 update deferral behavior a “Harebrained Design” award.
Reminds me a lot of the option in earlier versions of Windows to set a connection as “Public” – you got one chance and after that you had to move heaven and earth to change it.
1 user thanked author for this post.
NeoBeum
AskWoody LoungerNeoBeum
AskWoody Loungercptomes
AskWoody LoungerJuly 1, 2019 at 11:04 am #1864301The general idea was here to skip 1809, but Microsoft seems to not appreciate that very much. Oh well, the first Mac’s are happily running here, along with some test Linux Mint machines. Especially the Mac’s are a revelation, no more update- and upgrade stress. Linux Mint is also fine, but has the disadvantage of not being able to run MS Office. The big question now is: do we REALLY need that, or will Libre Office be a good replacement on those machines? For now it looks ok, but we might run into problems. The future will tell. For sure is though, that Windows is on it’s final way out here. Really way too much troubles and wasted time since version 10. Maybe nice for some home users and gamers, but it’s not designed for professional use. Neither are the useless forced upgrades that besides lost time only at simplistic features that for no other modern OS would require a reinstall.
I prefer OpenOffice. I walked away from M$ torture chamber in 2007 and went all Mac at home and professionally, became a Mac technician. Then got sucked back into the swirling toilet bowl of M$ updates in 2017. Thought 1709 then 1803 were heading back in the direction of nt4/win2k then 1809 fiasco happened. I have no confidence in M$. The only bright spot is that apparently Feature Updates now require a deliberate click on a new separate button in Windows Updates even on Home 1809. I hope this isn’t one step forward, two steps back.
In the meantime, my 10.11 13″ jelly bean macbook and 10.12 17″ mbp continue to soldier on…
Hey look! Another Feature Update!
You mean I shouldn't click Check for Updates?
Where is the Any key?
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