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The Register - Software: OSes

Fedora: Microsoft is all aboard, but Deepin is dumped Microsoft promises to do better, but it has a long way to go First big Microsoft update after vow to 'win back fans' Who needs ghost train scares when Windows is such a fright? Microsoft boss tells investors the company is working to 'win back fans' Microsoft boss says company is working to 'win back fans' Linux cryptographic code flaw offers fast route to root Fedora 44 is out – countless versions of it Microsoft sets its sights on the past with 86-DOS and PC-DOS Microsoft updates the Windows Update Experience Windows second-chance setup hurts IT, productivity Ubuntu Resolute Raccoon drops Xorg, keeps X11 apps alive More ancient Linux device support facing the ax WSL9x hacks Linux into ancient Windows 9x systems UK tribunal sends £2B claim accusing Microsoft of overcharging for licensing to trial Zorin OS 18.1 released - and the Lite edition reappears Task Manager's CPU%: an obituary for the recent past Linux 7.1 will have an optional new NTFS driver Microsoft releases Windows Server update to fix April update 20-year-old Enlightenment E16 bug finally gets patched 20-year-old Enlightenment E16 bug finally gets patched Raspberry Pi OS ends open-door policy for sudo Firefox Nightly adds Web Serial after years of saying no Windows Update: Torture chamber for seldom-used PCs Notepad loses Copilot icon as Microsoft gives subtlety a try Notepad loses Copilot icon as Microsoft gives subtlety a try Microsoft attempts to untangle Windows Insider program Adobe finally patches PDF pest after months of abuse NHS pays £46K to prep next Microsoft licensing round Linux 7.0 debuts as Linus Torvalds ponders AI's impact Linux 7.0 debuts as Linus Torvalds ponders AI's impact Red Hat RHELocates its Chinese engineering team to India Showing the Windows 10 desktop was the yeast they could do Apple's chips are winners, but Windows fails help it most The end of Linux i486 support looks nigh The end of Linux i486 support looks nigh Windows asks a networking question on a Stratford billboard Some 'broken by update' PCs were already doomed SystemRescue 13 lands with Linux 6.18 and bcachefs support Memo: Red Hat Global Engineering plans to lean in to AI Microsoft plans another out-of-band Windows fix Ubuntu beta arrives with GNOME 50, sans Google Drive support Ubuntu beta arrives with GNOME 50, sans Google Drive support Microsoft pulls Windows update after installation problems Microsoft pulls Windows update after installation problems Microsoft cracks down on old Windows kernel drivers Microsoft cracks down on old Windows kernel drivers Linux kernel czar says AI bug reports aren't slop anymore How Windows 95 fought off badly behaved installers Open source isn't a tip jar – it's time to charge for access Age checks creep into Linux as systemd gets a DOB field Systemd-free antiX 26: Debian 13, in bonsai form Systemd-free antiX 26: Debian 13, in bonsai form Windows boss promises to heal the operating system's wounds Windows boss promises to heal the operating system's wounds Smart TVs and voice assistants are the next gatekeepers Microsoft releases emergency fix for account internet error Microsoft releases emergency fix for account internet error Microsoft: Removing some Copilots will improve Windows 11 WSL, WINE updates speed cross-OS app performance MS update kills Microsoft account sign-ins in Windows 11 GNOME 50 debuts with X11 axed, Wayland front and center Microsoft publishes a workaround for Samsung's C:\ drive woes Systemd 260 kills SysV, tells AI not to misbehave Out-of-band getting out of hand as Microsoft pushes hotpatch for Bluetooth Microsoft pushes out-of-band hotpatch for Bluetooth Big moves in Linux filesystems as new bcachefs lands and KDE adds support for Apple's APFS Age verification isn't sage verification when it's inside operating systems Age verification isn't sage verification inside OSes Microsoft points at Samsung after Galaxy app bug locks users out of C:\ RAM is getting expensive, so squeeze the most from it Nanny state vs. Linux: show us your ID, kid Smart mirror shows dumb Windows in elevator Microsoft adding Xbox mode to Windows 11 – even the Professional edition DR-DOS rises again – rebuilt from scratch, not open source Hotpatching goes default in Windows Autopatch whether you like it or not Hotpatching goes default in Windows Autopatch Linux PC vendor System76 tries to talk Colorado down over OS age checks System76 tries to talk Colorado down over OS age checks US state laws push age checks into the operating system Microsoft finally gets around to fixing Windows 10 Recovery Environment after breaking it in October BunsenLabs Carbon keeps the CrunchBang flame alive with Debian 13 Bootleg Windows, Office scheme crashes, triggers 22-month lockup for Florida woman
Windows Update: Torture chamber for seldom-used PCs
Avram Piltch Avram Piltch · 2026-04-14 · via The Register - Software: OSes

OSes

Microsoft punishes you for updating infrequently

OPINION It's not the first time this has happened to me and it won't be the last. I pulled a laptop that I hadn't used for six months out of a drawer, then waited through three hours and four rounds of reboots for it to update Windows 11 completely.

It probably didn't help that the laptop in question, a Lenovo Yoga Slim 7x, was running an Insider build of Windows. And if I were a different type of user, I might have continued to work on the laptop while it downloaded all these updates rather than waiting impatiently and clicking the "Check for Updates" button in Settings over and over again. However, I wanted to run tests on this computer, so I needed it to be completely up-to-date. And it went through two or three different builds while I waited.

This feels like a punishment for not going with the program and updating on a regular basis. Frankly, I'd rather that someone from Redmond came to my office and skewered me with searing hot (yet friendly) paperclips. I'd even accept being sentenced to get all my news from MSN over this.

Let's face it. Microsoft has built Windows with the assumption that you're using your PC on a daily basis and perhaps even leaving it on when you go to sleep at night so that it can reboot while you catch some ZZZs. If you have a PC in a drawer that you only pull out on occasion or after weeks of inactivity, Redmond intends to punish you with long wait times and annoying alerts demanding that you reboot to install an update.

What I want to know is why Microsoft can't just detect exactly what files you need updated, download them all in one go, and then perform a single reboot. And why can't it have more updates that happen in the background and don't require a reboot in the first place?

"Windows updates are cumulative but not infinitely so," Chongwei Chen, President and CEO of data recovery software company DataNumen, explained to The Register. "Microsoft periodically releases 'baseline' rollups, meaning a PC that's been off for months can't simply jump to the latest patch — it must first install prerequisite updates that bring the system to a state where the newest patches can be applied. Each of those intermediate updates may modify system files that require a reboot to replace while Windows is not running."

Perhaps most people don't have computers sitting in a drawer for several months. But I bet lots of people have an "occasional use" computer that they pull out just for one purpose.

For example, we have a Lenovo IdeaPad at my temple that we use exclusively for video conferencing. When there's a meeting or a lecture in the boardroom, someone pulls the laptop out of a credenza, plugs it into a webcam, and dials into Zoom so that people at home can participate.

In between meetings, nobody uses the Zoom laptop at all. So every time I use it, it harasses me about rebooting to install updates. Fortunately, it has never forced a reboot in the middle of a Zoom session, but it uses increasingly aggressive language and alerts to demand we restart it.

But who in the temple is going to sit there for 10 minutes or more while this downloads new updates and reboots? We pull the laptop out about five minutes before a meeting starts and we shut its lid immediately after leaving the meeting. No one is going to sit there in an empty boardroom after everyone else has left just so that Windows can run an update.

The problem isn't limited to Windows 11 either. A couple of years ago, I was working at a different job where they gave me the world's slowest and crappiest Windows 10 laptop. I kept that laptop in a locker for several years without turning it on, until a day during the COVID lockdown when the company wanted me to turn it on for some reason. It took all day – and I mean an entire business day – for it to update after having been unused for three years.

My colleague, Richard Speed, told me that he once had a Windows 7 laptop that took more than three days to get through its series of updates.

And may the gods help you if you buy a brand new PC that's been sitting on a shelf for months or years. You might have hours of updates after you first take it out of the box. If you're not updating a managed PC, your best move might be to reinstall Windows and all your software from scratch; that's faster than waiting for some updates.

Unfortunately, in this day and age, software updates are a necessary evil. So I would never recommend that you disable the Windows update service. And if we're keeping it real, we know that every software-driven device has updates, even those that use Linux, macOS, Android, or iOS.

However, Windows updates seem to be the longest and most punitive of any I've experienced. Phone updates tend to take a minute or two and come very infrequently. Even when I update Linux on a Raspberry Pi I've kept in a drawer, it takes minutes, not hours. Friends with Macs say that, apart from the annual macOS refresh, the updates are rather unobtrusive, and the barrier to entry has never been lower.

But Microsoft has many new features it wants to push, tons of PC drivers to support, and countless security holes to patch in the world's most widely used desktop operating system. Such is life for the occasional PC user.

If Microsoft wanted to make a real improvement in its OS, rather than festooning it with unwanted Copilot iterations, it would work on making Windows update slimmer, faster, and less frequent. It would also find more ways to roll up updates from previous eras into new packages so that users who've missed an update or four don't have to sit through hours of reboots.

What should you do if you have a PC that you don't need to use all the time? I consulted several experts for advice, but if you're like me, you won't love it. They advised taking seldom-used computers out of the drawer every month and letting them run for an hour or more to catch up with updates. That would mean that someone at my temple would have to "own" maintenance on the Zoom laptop, an awkward conversation I can't imagine having with the rabbi. Perhaps I’ll recommend a Chromebook the next time it’s due for a refresh.

"Microsoft developed Windows Update with daily use in mind, which makes it hell for seldom-used computers," Dario Ferrari, co-founder of OpenClawVPS, told The Register. Indeed! ®