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Windows Bug

Glitches for Windows 11 Update Include Breaking File Explorer (zdnet.com) 46

Five days ago on Patch Tuesday, Microsoft released patch KB5051987 for Windows 11 version 24H2, writes the XDA Developers site.

But "As reported by Windows Latest and various communities like Reddit and Microsoft's help forum, many users have encountered a major issue..."

Some have reported that, in addition to File Explorer failing to launch, they're unable to open folders from the desktop, save Office files, or even download files. Clicking on a folder icon may display its subfolders, but the contents within remain inaccessible... Some users on Microsoft's help forum and Reddit have also reported that the KB5051987 patch fails to install entirely. The update gets stuck at a certain percentage for hours before eventually displaying an error code. While these are among the most widely reported issues, others have surfaced as well, including problems with Taskbar preview animations, the camera, and more.
"Microsoft keeps running into brick walls with the 2024 version of Windows 11," writes ZDNet. "Each new update designed to fix the outstanding bugs ends up introducing other problems..." Among the glitches resolved were ones that affected digital audio converters, USB audio drivers, USB cameras, and passkeys. The update also patched several security vulnerabilities, including some that were deemed critical....

Other glitches that may pop up include a stuttering mouse, an undetectable camera, .NET apps that cannot be installed inside the Windows Sandbox, and the Taskbar's new preview animation that does not work properly. You may also encounter other roadblocks. One person in the Windows Feedback Hub said that after installing the update, the battery life shows only 2.5 hours versus 6 hours previously. Another person found that the clipboard history no longer copies items from Microsoft Word...

Each annual Windows update can suffer from bugs, especially after being rolled out to millions of users. However, Windows 11 24H2 has been more problematic than usual. Since its official launch last October, the 2024 version has carried with it a host of known issues, many of which still haven't been resolved.

Glitches for Windows 11 Update Include Breaking File Explorer

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  • the sky is blue.

    • And I want the simplicity and streamlined behavior of Windows 7 in classic UI mode back.

      • ... but with modern under-the-hood features and a modern web browser.

        For the average user, Windows 2000 was pretty much uncluttered, especially by today's standards. It had a few games, but they weren't networked, didn't phone home, and as far as I remember, didn't have ads. It had a version of Internet Explorer and a few other basic applications.

        Or, to put it another way, give me Windows 11 with most of what we call "apps" or "applications" and almost all "phone-home" features stripped out and most "unde

      • Users shout "we want the ability to manually update because we no longer have faith in you, Microsoft"

        Microsoft hears "we want more shit broken MS products like copilot advertised on the login a screen"
        • And now we can finally see what MS are adding in the giant updates they keep pushing out that seem to add nothing: It's more bugs. They're not adding features (they ran out of ideas for those in 2016), they're just adding bugs.
  • I wonder if MS ever test anything.
    • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Saturday February 22, 2025 @03:57PM (#65187633)
      Well this is the same MS that is hell bent on getting everyone off Windows 10 despite examples like this as why people are hesitant to migrate.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

        Well this is the same MS that is hell bent on getting everyone off Windows 10 despite examples like this as why people are hesitant to migrate.

        Errrr no. No one is "hesitant to migrate". The migration is all but forced for users who are capable of actually running Windows 11. In any case you're risk aversion is quite skewed. Windows is objectively buggy. There's lots of enduring problems in the system and they frequently get fixed with major version updates. Yeah new bugs are introduced and the occasional windows update gets screwed up, but on the whole MS fixes far more than they typically break with updates.

        Heck I even remember installing an insi

        • I'm hesitant to migrate. I've been eligible for the free update for a couple of years now, and it is an option that shows in Windows Update, but to date, I declined. The " PC Health Check app" says my hardware fully supports Windows 11, but it declines to tell me what apps will have issues, which is my main hesitation as I know I will spend days and money getting what just works today to work in the updated OS. I still have Adobe CS 5, I know it is old, but I only use it for specialized astrophotography
        • Errrr no. No one is "hesitant to migrate".

          Why do you always assert demonstrably false dichotomies? If there is a single person that is hesitant to migrate (and there are), you are spewing out falsehoods.

          The migration is all but forced for users who are capable of actually running Windows 11.

          And the fact some people do not want to migrate is not part of your calculus?

          In any case you're risk aversion is quite skewed. Windows is objectively buggy. There's lots of enduring problems in the system and they frequently get fixed with major version updates. Yeah new bugs are introduced and the occasional windows update gets screwed up, but on the whole MS fixes far more than they typically break with updates.

          Translation: I should accept buggy versions of Windows because you say so.

          Heck I even remember installing an insider build at one point due to an infuriating Windows 10 bug that I just couldn't wait to have resolved, and as soon as the next major version rolled out (think it was 21H2 or something like that), I reverted back to the "stable" releases.

          So were a beta tester for MS. Congrats. Do you not think most of us do not want to be unpaid testers for MS?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      I wonder if MS ever test anything.

      They do. In the field, where somebody else has to pay for it and somebody else has to pick up the pieces.

  • { -- "Microsoft keeps running into brick walls with the 2024 version of Windows 11," writes ZDNet. "Each new update designed to fix the outstanding bugs ends up introducing other problems..." --} Microsoft seems to have had a QA problem ever since they got rid of the Windows QA team, and apparently substituted wishing and hoping for that team. /s
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday February 22, 2025 @04:05PM (#65187649)

    'til File Explorer won't run!

  • by Acron ( 1253166 ) on Saturday February 22, 2025 @04:50PM (#65187699)

    Lovely. Perhaps they'd like to extend the EOL for Windows 10 by a year while they make sure basic OS functionality is operational in Windows 11.

    • It's never stopped them before, why now?

      Windows update has been breaking itself as long as it's existed.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        And at the same time, I run automatic (!) updates on Debian every 3 days, and it has resulted in one minor problem in the 20 years I have been doing it. MS is simply abysmally incompetent and does not care one bit about engineering quality.

    • Sorry, they're too busy making the basic OS and UI functionality worse to fix all the bugs in it.
  • At this point, with as many failures as Microsoft has with this "patch", the best thing to do is issue a full roll-back to the previous version and undo all these failures. Then, they can take a look at what they did and take a flamethrower to it. For at least a minute to be sure it's dead.

    For a company of ths size to have this many repeated failures can't even be called disgraceful. Incompetent is the only word which can be used.

  • They could have made it work, make user-friendly, but instead they focused on packing it full of AI spyware.
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      I'd rather they just stop fucking with the UI and just clean out existing bugs. MS lost its UI touch decades ago; they'll make it worse if they try.

  • It's a 3 TRILLION dollar company. And they get surprised like road services each winter.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      The larger, the higher the risk of gross incompetence. Look at Boeing or Crowdstrike for other examples. Or Arther Anderson, which was one of the largest multinational enterprises before they got caught not only being incompetent, but highly criminal.

  • Microsoft and their buggy ass updates wreck more havoc with the average PC than any
    intentionally crafted malicious content does in this day and age.

    You can do everything right and Microsoft will still break your f*****g computer :|

    I'm not entirely sure how Microsoft is able to avoid getting the sh*t sued out of them for
    the absolute chaos their own ( forced ) patches create.

  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Saturday February 22, 2025 @08:48PM (#65188107)

    Each new update designed to fix the outstanding bugs ends up introducing other problems...

    Isn't this what's known in the industry as Technical Debt? Or in this case, a failure to pay down said Debt with sufficient diligence...

  • I am curious, why people scream like mad, but continue sitting in the mudpit. Crawl out, clean up and forget about Windows. Not that hard.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Actually not that easy in many situations, unfortunately. MS has invested decades in making it hard to leave them behind. They are certainly not competing on engineering quality or price these days.

      What we need is liability for crapware like this. Maybe if MS is due $500 for every time a user has to clean up their mess that will make a difference. And maybe if they cannot prove they were following the state-of-the-art, unlimited liability for all damage done would also be a good idea. To protect smaller pla

  • by angel'o'sphere ( 80593 ) <angelo@schneider.oomentor@de> on Sunday February 23, 2025 @01:26AM (#65188409) Journal

    My current laptop is indeed a Windows 11 one. But I clicked the update yesterday away.
    About 10days ago I wrote a rudimentary File Explorer in Dart. Perhaps I should make a real one, lolz.
    I only used it as a kind of toy to find all images in a folder and its subfolders ... it ran in debug mode from the IDE in a Dart VM running Dart bytecode - and still was minimum 100 times faster than the windows file explorer.

    Opening a few hundred images in roughly 200x200 size and displaying them in a window, was basically instantly.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. MS stuff is often borked to an unimaginable level. Why are they getting away with it?

  • Seriously. Going easy in Microsoft when they mess it up again and again and again has to stop. It is also high time for liability for defective products and services that are as critical as these.

  • ... fkd up and you have to stop it.

    Search for "regedit 24h2 block" and you'll find some solutions.

  • They must be using Artificial Idiocy. Welcome to "we don't need developers any longer" You actually need to be a very good developer to spot AI hallucinations. they could use AI to replace managers instead. When have *they* ever done anything useful?
  • Thatâ(TM)s what we keep hearing for the last 40 years, and here we are again.
  • No problems. Sup, I've been robbed!

  • Windows 11 ME 2025! It ain't done until it's broken, now run the cloud subscription version like your supposed to!

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