![]() ![]() This is so important because my mom needs to do her email on it and the system might update right when she's about to send her email. When I turn it on, it reverts to where it started, then it goes back to the desktop after Mom logs in. Even if it were offline, it would out of nowhere (by the way, after it notified you) start to update (probably because Windows stores the update in a cache somewhere), then during the process, it would shut down. But since then, as far as I know, her computer still wanted to update anyway. I thought it would make it so that her computer wouldn't need to update anymore. Now, one time, I turned off the "Windows Update" service. Windows always wants her to be up to date. She uses a Samsung Galaxy S9 with the default email app on it. ![]() She has to use it because her phone can read email, but it can't send it. However, on the next patch installation the entire process repeats. Usualy if you leave this process alone, the server will come up after a few cycles (which can take more then an hour). After a lengthy period of time the server reboots, and the process repeats. It has an AMD A6-6xxx (As far as I can remember, a 6600M), 4GB of RAM, and a 500GB hard drive. On reboot, a failure message is displayed and windows tries to undo the updates. My mom has an old 2012-ish HP Pavilion g4 Windows 10 Laptop (that came with Windows 8/8.1) that she uses for doing her email. ![]()
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