All right so there were some windows updates yesterday and after I installed them and restarted my pc for some reason I couldn't run any executables from the desktop or start menu..nothing not IE not Firefox, hell not even system restore..I had to go into safe mode and do a restore. I know it was the updates cause as an experiment I installed them again and the same thing happened...any ideas?
Windows updates screwed me
Collapse
X
-
I did all the updates, and things are working alright for me. Something on your computer must conflict with one of the updates ... -
hmmmm any ideas on what I should do admin...I gotta admit to not even ever looking to see what the updates are...I just do them..what was in this batch?sigpic
Turn down the suck...Turn up the
good
-------------------------------------------Comment
-
Comment
-
Shutdown automatic updates, restore to before the updates were installed. Go to Windows update & custom search, download & install the updates one at a time until you find the one that is messing you up. Go to Microsoft & see if a fix is mentioned, if there is fix it & turn back on automatic updates when you are done. If there isn't I am out of ideas.Last edited by soup; 17 Aug 2007, 05:00 AM.
Comment
-
Your not alone on this. I know of 2 people besides myself that did the latest rounds of updates only to have serious problems. For me it took several reboots, kept crashing before log in screen. Finally I was able to load up Windows, and everything seems fine. Some people have reported that devices such as printers, external drives, etc.. needed to be re-installed. Others reported that that after reboot they could not load Windows at all. Unfortunately at this point nobody knows which update is the culprit, if it is a specific one.
I must confess though that I really did not pay specific attention to what each individual patch was for. I usually just deal with any security fixes, which all were listed as, and save the "enhancements for another day (like for IE7-when hell freezes over).
Anyways, you might want to seriously consider using something like Acronis True Image, or some other disk imaging software to take a snapshot of your current system. In the event Windows becomes really screwed up, saves more time just to restore an image than to muck around spending hours trying to fix something that quite possibly no solution will be found.Comment
-
This is the plan of attack (POA) I use for downloading and installing Microsoft updates on Microsoft Tuesday. It has worked in the past and appears to be working today. I had 9 updates last Tuesday and have been using IE-7 since the begining.
1. Use a good registry cleaner and clean out the registry before and after the updates. (normally clean out the registry 3 times per week)
2. Use the software program CC Cleaner once per day.
3. Reboot and average of once per day.
4. Defrag and check disk the hard drive for errors 3 times per week.
5. Anti virus and spam check once per day
6. Always have firewall running when on line.
7. Create restore points once per week
8. Use Acronis backup and create their ISO image of the hard drive once per month if the hard drive is lost for any reason.
9. Backup my software programs on CD-R once per month to save time if the hard drive is completely lost.
Comment
-
For a couple of days, I experience issues with "AutomaticLiveUpdate.exe has expericed a serious error and needs to close". Hopefully, it was isolated.
RegardsLes
Essential progs - [PgcEdit] [VobBlanker] [MenuShrink] [IfoEdit] [Muxman] [DVD Remake Pro] [DVD Rebuilder] [BeSweet] [Media Player Classic] [DVDSubEdit] [ImgBurn]
Media and Burning - [Golden Rules of Burning] [Media quality] [Fix your DMA] [Update your Firmware] [What's my Media ID Code?] [How to test your disc]
[What's bitsetting?] [Burn dual layer disks safely] [Why not to burn with Ner0] [Interpret Ner0's burn errors] [Got bad playback?] [Burner/Media compatibility]
Cool Techniques - [2COOL's guides] [Clean your DVD] [Join a flipper] [Split into 2 DVDs] [Save heaps of Mb] [How to mock strip] [Cool Insert Clips]
Real useful info - [FAQ INDEX] [Compression explained] [Logical Remapping of Enabled Streams] [DVD-Replica] [Fantastic info on DVDs]
You should only use genuine Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden media. Many thanks to www.pcx.com.au for their supply and great service.
Explore the sites and the programs - there's a gold mine of information in them
Comment
-
This is the plan of attack (POA) I use for downloading and installing Microsoft updates on Microsoft Tuesday. It has worked in the past and appears to be working today. I had 9 updates last Tuesday and have been using IE-7 since the begining.
1. Use a good registry cleaner and clean out the registry before and after the updates. (normally clean out the registry 3 times per week)
2. Use the software program CC Cleaner once per day.
3. Reboot and average of once per day.
4. Defrag and check disk the hard drive for errors 3 times per week.
5. Anti virus and spam check once per day
6. Always have firewall running when on line.
7. Create restore points once per week
8. Use Acronis backup and create their ISO image of the hard drive once per month if the hard drive is lost for any reason.
9. Backup my software programs on CD-R once per month to save time if the hard drive is completely lost.
SAMSUNG SH-S203B, SAMSUNG SH-S223F,
Take the suggestions and follow the directions. The results will speak for themselves.
Google is definitely our friend.Comment
-
@dr ml422
Any software burning program should work. I just happen to use MusicMatch Plus for the 49 executable programs on this computer. I burn all 49 executable programs in data format to a 700mb CD-R disk, just load the 49 executable files to the 700mb CD-R disk and burn. It is just quicker and easier to have the 49 executable programs on one disk than having to go back to the 49 different websites to download the executables if you loose the hard drive. Just keep the 49 executables (files) up to date on your hard drive and download to the 700mb CD-R disk once per month.
99% of the time I use Imgburn for the DVD 5 (4.7gb) and DVD 9 (8.5 gb) to burn my videos. Generally for a 2 hour movie or less I will use a blank DVD 5 disk with minor or no compression. Anything over a 2 hour movie goes on a DVD 9 disk with no compression at all. I prefer movie only on my blank back-up disks.
Too early for me to burn Blu-ray and HD DVD blank disks to work properly on a standalone player. For me it is not cost effective at this time, still many hi def problems have to be worked out.Last edited by ed klein; 25 Nov 2007, 09:49 AM.Comment
-
I had I think like 10 update that I have down loaded the other day and had no problems. Then I had a video driver update yesterday, I had to restore my laptop 5 times yesterday, finally the last time I downloaded the drive it was fine. When I would scroll down on a web page the screen would go blank for 2 seconds, never figured out why.Star Baby Girl, Born March,1997 Died June 30th 2007 6:35 PM.Comment
-
driver updates are dangerous fom microsoft, they should give up and throw in the towel
on then
they have screwed me up 2 or 3 times, I haven't allowed them to update hardware for over a year
if it ain't broke they will break it, video drivers are especially touchyComment
-
I did have some other video problems that have now been fixed with the update. I would have some freezing of the video while playing movies on the laptop, tried two other media players, all had the freezing of the video. That is gone now. Only time will tell if I made the right choice.Star Baby Girl, Born March,1997 Died June 30th 2007 6:35 PM.Comment
Comment