F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Disable advanced startup/recovery after three consecutive hard resets on Win10

Disable advanced startup/recovery after three consecutive hard resets on Win10

Disable advanced startup/recovery after three consecutive hard resets on Win10

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wouterretuow
Member
50
07-23-2016, 08:08 PM
#1
Hi, your question is a bit unusual. It seems you're asking if it's feasible to disable the Recovery or Advanced Startup menu that appears when the PC shuts down three times in a row. I understand this is related to a safety feature Microsoft has implemented to prevent the system from restarting repeatedly without booting into Windows. The goal here is to avoid the recovery screen, especially with devices like kiosk units that rely on touchscreens and don't support recovery mode. You'd prefer the OS to crash instead of showing the recovery option, which would require a full reinstall.
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wouterretuow
07-23-2016, 08:08 PM #1

Hi, your question is a bit unusual. It seems you're asking if it's feasible to disable the Recovery or Advanced Startup menu that appears when the PC shuts down three times in a row. I understand this is related to a safety feature Microsoft has implemented to prevent the system from restarting repeatedly without booting into Windows. The goal here is to avoid the recovery screen, especially with devices like kiosk units that rely on touchscreens and don't support recovery mode. You'd prefer the OS to crash instead of showing the recovery option, which would require a full reinstall.

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BlueStar_LH
Posting Freak
842
07-24-2016, 05:07 AM
#2
Updated to Windows version
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BlueStar_LH
07-24-2016, 05:07 AM #2

Updated to Windows version

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LexieLouWho
Junior Member
4
07-24-2016, 05:35 AM
#3
Yes, it's a viable choice. BCDedit /set {default} recoveryenabled no Doc: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows...t-problems Offers other useful options and clarifies the BCDedit command structure: such as bcdedit /set bootstatuspolicy ignoreallfailures Helpful to know.
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LexieLouWho
07-24-2016, 05:35 AM #3

Yes, it's a viable choice. BCDedit /set {default} recoveryenabled no Doc: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows...t-problems Offers other useful options and clarifies the BCDedit command structure: such as bcdedit /set bootstatuspolicy ignoreallfailures Helpful to know.

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_God47_
Member
108
07-24-2016, 06:51 AM
#4
Great job on that task!
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_God47_
07-24-2016, 06:51 AM #4

Great job on that task!