New
#500
@TairikuOkami
After clean installation of Windows, Windows will automatically download and install essential drivers.
Will your commands in post #473 prevent the above operation, which I don't want to prevent?
Should I delay running your commands until the operation has finished?
@TairikuOkami
I found this sentence: 'The second command ensures UsoClient.exe can’t be run by any user or system group' at [How To] Manually install Windows 10 updates
As UsoClient.exe can’t be run, why can my VBScript still check for updates automatically via Task Scheduler?
Ok, maybe it's because you forgot to remove inheritance, but I noticed that the following (below, not the quoted commands) didn't work. Updates would still be detected and installed, with the additional problem that Cumulative Updates were acting as if they hadn't been installed until adding the UsoClient permissions back, and then it would detect them as being installed.
The whole idea of this is that even with the Windows Update service running, new updates aren't detected and installed unless manually checked, right? Hopefully also removing inheritance fixes that and does that.
Code:takeown /f "%WINDIR%\System32\UsoClient.exe" /a icacls "%WINDIR%\System32\UsoClient.exe" /remove "Administrators" "Authenticated Users" "Users" "System"
i have update enabled... yes they can be a pain but from what i am learning about ten its best to stay updated, cause other wise it could cause issues with the os... at least from what i have read ..