F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems No, the only solution is to uninstall the update.

No, the only solution is to uninstall the update.

No, the only solution is to uninstall the update.

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ReborntoKill
Posting Freak
821
02-24-2023, 04:24 PM
#1
Your PC is rebooting Windows Updates automatically again. You've removed similar updates multiple times before, as those KB500xx updates affected your frame rates. There may be alternative ways to manage the updates, and you can try disabling automatic updates or checking for driver conflicts. Also, consider investigating potential NVIDIA driver issues that could be impacting performance.
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ReborntoKill
02-24-2023, 04:24 PM #1

Your PC is rebooting Windows Updates automatically again. You've removed similar updates multiple times before, as those KB500xx updates affected your frame rates. There may be alternative ways to manage the updates, and you can try disabling automatic updates or checking for driver conflicts. Also, consider investigating potential NVIDIA driver issues that could be impacting performance.

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Nikita_Banane
Member
161
02-24-2023, 05:49 PM
#2
With the correct Win10 install, you can disable automatic updates. Some third-party tools can achieve this, though they may not fully restrict a particular patch. See the guide on blocking specific Windows updates on SpiceWorks community forums: https://community.spiceworks.com/how_to/...ws-updates
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Nikita_Banane
02-24-2023, 05:49 PM #2

With the correct Win10 install, you can disable automatic updates. Some third-party tools can achieve this, though they may not fully restrict a particular patch. See the guide on blocking specific Windows updates on SpiceWorks community forums: https://community.spiceworks.com/how_to/...ws-updates

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GreenLightFabi
Senior Member
696
02-24-2023, 10:47 PM
#3
Not that this helps you, but it's on their known issues list with this update and allegedly have rolled back the offending code through their "Known Issue Rollback". It should be removed after a reboot if I understand it correctly.
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GreenLightFabi
02-24-2023, 10:47 PM #3

Not that this helps you, but it's on their known issues list with this update and allegedly have rolled back the offending code through their "Known Issue Rollback". It should be removed after a reboot if I understand it correctly.

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RemguixX
Junior Member
41
02-25-2023, 01:06 AM
#4
Updated to Windows version
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RemguixX
02-25-2023, 01:06 AM #4

Updated to Windows version