servicing stack

  1. Microsoft fixes Update and Shut Down bug in Windows 11 Insider previews

    Microsoft has quietly repaired one of Windows’ quietly maddening UX bugs: the long-running “Update and shut down” option — which often installed updates only to leave machines powered on instead of finishing with a true shutdown — now behaves as labeled in recent Windows 11 preview builds...
  2. Windows 11 KB5070773 OOB Cumulative: 25H2 and 24H2 Install Guide

    Microsoft has pushed an out‑of‑band cumulative for Windows 11 — KB5070773 — to address immediate servicing and compatibility needs for the 25H2 and 24H2 servicing branches (OS Builds 26200.6901 and 26100.6901), and the release comes with specific offline installation guidance, bundled...
  3. Windows 10 End of Support 2025: 5 Realistic Paths to Stay Secure

    Windows 10 will stop receiving free security fixes on October 14, 2025 — and if your PC can’t take the free Windows 11 upgrade, you have five realistic paths forward: enroll in Extended Security Updates (ESU), buy or rent a new Windows 11 PC (including cloud PCs), perform an unsupported upgrade...
  4. KB5065429: Windows 10 ESU Enrollment & End-of-Support 2025

    Microsoft pushed Windows 10 cumulative update KB5065429 to 22H2 machines this week, a mandatory security rollup that arrives as the platform approaches its October 14, 2025 end‑of‑support deadline — and it’s tightly linked to Microsoft’s consumer Extended Security Updates (ESU) enrollment path...
  5. Microsoft September 2025 Patch Tuesday: 80+ CVEs, RCEs, and hardening

    Microsoft’s September Patch Tuesday delivered a broad, operationally important set of security updates on September 9, 2025, covering Windows, Microsoft Office, SQL Server and related platform components — with industry trackers reporting roughly 80–86 CVEs patched and several high‑priority...
  6. Nano11 Builder: Ultra-Small Windows 11 ISOs via Aggressive Debloat

    NTDEV’s new Nano11 Builder takes the Windows‑11 debloat movement from pragmatic trimming to experimental minimalism, producing bootable ISOs and installed images measured in single‑digit gigabytes by surgically removing inbox apps, servicing infrastructure, and even parts of the Windows...
  7. Tiny11 and Nano11: Slim Windows 11 to a Few Gigabytes

    A stripped-down, community-built version of Windows 11 has pushed the limits of what the OS can be when every nonessential component is removed: tiny installation media, dramatic runtime compression, and the deliberate sacrifice of serviceability and security to reach an astonishingly small...
  8. WinAppSDK 1.6.2 Break Fix: KB5046714 Patch Restores Store App Installs (Win10 22H2)

    Microsoft pushed a fix after a WinAppSDK release accidentally broke Microsoft Store installs and updates, but until you apply the patch or follow the advised workarounds many users on Windows 10 version 22H2 will see app installs fail with the cryptic “Something happened on our end” or error...
  9. Windows 11 CertEnroll Event ID 57 Noise Fixed by KB5064081 (Aug 2025)

    Microsoft has quietly closed the loop on a recent Event Viewer nuisance in Windows 11 by shipping a targeted fix in the August preview update, addressing repeated CertificateServicesClient log entries that were cluttering system logs and unnerving admins despite posing no functional harm...
  10. August 2025 Windows Update Breaks MSI Self-Repair: UAC 1730 in Lab Deployments

    Microsoft’s August 2025 cumulative rollups have introduced a surprising compatibility regression: launching some MSI‑based applications — most notably AutoCAD family products, Firefox variants, and certain SAP installers — can now surface a User Account Control (UAC) elevation prompt at first...
  11. Fix Windows Update 0x80240069 in WSUS/SCCM Deployments (KB5063878)

    Enterprise administrators are reporting that Windows Update error 0x80240069 appears when deploying the August cumulative update KB5063878 through WSUS or SCCM, while the same package installs cleanly via Windows Update and manual downloads. The pattern points to a delivery path problem in...
  12. August 2025 Windows Recovery Regression: OOB Fixes Restore Reset and RemoteWipe

    Microsoft pushed an out-of-band emergency update on August 19–20, 2025 to repair a Windows recovery regression caused by its August Patch Tuesday rollup, restoring core recovery features such as Reset this PC, cloud reimaging via Fix problems using Windows Update, and certain MDM remote-wipe...
  13. Microsoft fixes Windows upgrade error 0x8007007F with OOB updates (Aug 2025)

    Microsoft has quietly closed a painful upgrade gap: after days of user reports and frantic troubleshooting, the Windows Setup error that surfaced as 0x8007007F during certain in‑place upgrades has been resolved and recovery/reset regressions have been mitigated with targeted out‑of‑band updates...
  14. Microsoft Publishes OOB Fixes for August 2025 Windows Recovery Regression

    Microsoft has confirmed an emergency out‑of‑band (OOB) Windows update after August’s Patch Tuesday rollup caused built‑in recovery tools — Reset this PC, the cloud reimage flow Fix problems using Windows Update, and MDM‑initiated RemoteWipe CSP — to fail on multiple client branches, and...
  15. Microsoft Out-of-Band Updates Fix Windows Recovery After August 2025 Patch Rollups

    Microsoft pushed emergency out‑of‑band updates on August 19, 2025 to repair a serious regression introduced by the August Patch Tuesday rollups that broke Windows’ built‑in recovery tools — restoring Reset this PC, the cloud reimage flow, and certain MDM RemoteWipe operations for affected...
  16. August 2025 Windows Patch Regression: OOB Fixes Restore Reset and Cloud Recovery

    Microsoft’s August Patch Tuesday delivered the usual mix of security fixes — and an unexpected operational headache: a servicing regression in the August 12, 2025 cumulative updates that broke Windows’ built‑in reset and recovery flows on several supported client branches and, in some upgrade...
  17. August 2025 Windows Recovery Fix: OOB KB5066189/88/87 Restore Reset and Cloud Recovery

    Microsoft’s August update cycle produced an unexpected and dangerous side effect: built‑in recovery tools stopped working on numerous Windows client releases, and Redmond pushed emergency, out‑of‑band (OOB) cumulative updates — KB5066189, KB5066188 and KB5066187 — on August 19, 2025 to restore...
  18. Windows Reset and Recovery Restored by August 2025 OOB Fixes

    Microsoft pushed emergency out‑of‑band updates on August 19, 2025, to repair a critical regression that prevented Windows’ built‑in reset and recovery tools from completing — a problem introduced by the August 12, 2025 Patch Tuesday security rollup that caused attempted “Reset this PC” and cloud...
  19. August 2025 Patch Tuesday Breaks Windows Recovery; Microsoft Issues OOB Fixes

    Microsoft's August Patch Tuesday set off a chain reaction: the security update that fixed scores of vulnerabilities also broke Windows' own recovery tools for many users, and Microsoft was forced to ship out-of-band (OOB) emergency patches to undo the damage. The recovery failure — which could...
  20. Windows 11 Aug 2025 KB5063878: Install Failures & SSD Disappear Risks

    Microsoft’s August Windows 11 patch cycle has produced two very different but equally alarming headlines this week: an emergency mitigation for enterprise update delivery failures, and community reports that the same cumulative update may be triggering storage devices to become unreadable or...