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#11
i had the same problem, after investigation, i found out the wireless network driver is the reason, i updated it, now i have normal startup timing.
i had the same problem, after investigation, i found out the wireless network driver is the reason, i updated it, now i have normal startup timing.
Same issue here. From pushing the button on my computer to being on the desktop ready to go used to take 7-10 seconds, depending on how fast I typed in my pin. After typing in my pin, I used to go to the desktop in less than 1 second. Now, after typing in my pin, it takes 20-30 seconds to go to the desktop. This is after the largest recent update, the gigantic update.
#12
<<if updates where not forced then sure that would be do able but it not so i just deal with it and hope MS fixes>>
Tsunami2311
Yes let's hope MS get their act together soon, but I'm not holding my breath...
I would go a step further, if it was not forsneaky updates I would revert to Windows 7.
Though the problems I had since upgrading are relatively minor, every time I start the computer I wonder, what next.
I'd like you to try something. Type Event Viewer in the start search bar, click event viewer. Drop down the following check marks in Event Viewer: Applications and Services Logs > Microsoft > Windows > Diagnostics-Performance > Operational. Event ID 100 is boot up time, 200 is shutdown, 101 is Antimalware causing boot issues. I'm not sure what it all means, but I believe I'm getting closer to the root cause of this. It may be related to Windows Defender. Disabling it has had no effect on my login/startup so far but I believe I'm onto something.
Actually, try this if you have auto-hide the taskbar enabled. Disable it. It changed my login time from 30 seconds to 1 second.