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Edge seems a bit buggy in this version. I've had more than one PC where it takes ages to download a page or even close Edge and re-start. Once it's 'settled' or re-started thru Task Manager it behaves normally.
Edge seems a bit buggy in this version. I've had more than one PC where it takes ages to download a page or even close Edge and re-start. Once it's 'settled' or re-started thru Task Manager it behaves normally.
Sorry I don't have the whole update history. I cleared the cache because I was getting an error (0x8024a223) sometimes when checking for updates (I have automatic updates disabled via group policy, though Defender Definition updates download automatically anyway, but that doesn't bother me). But I can show you this so you can see I had it already installed for a while now.
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It is a weird, puzzling but by the same token, very interesting case. Supposedly, if the FU 1809 was paused, so should be the CU (KB4464330) that came right after it. The only thing I can think of, for now, would be that maybe you recently rolled back your system with a system image backup to a date before this CU was installed, meaning before October 21 and now Windows is reinstalling it. Go figure!
I didn't rollback anything. I have everything disabled, system restore, updates, that kind of stuff. I just deleted the Windows Update cache yesterday, and today it decided to download and install the update again.
Not to worry, even if you have cleared you update history youmayedit: will still be able to see both your successful and your failed updates recorded in the Reliability Monitor. Here's one of each I had on 10th October.
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View Reliability History in Windows 10 | Windows 10 Tutorials
Edit: I've just checked that on a test machine.
Last edited by Bree; 02 Nov 2018 at 19:43.
I just went to check for the presence of the update (KB4464330) in the Microsoft Update Catalog and it is still there. I would have thought that it would be paused also just as the FU 1809. In a way, that partly explained your case. Maybe, just the fact of cleaning the update cache would trigger the re-install of the update. The only way to be sure would be to reproduce the same thing by cleaning the update cache again and see if the update reinstall itself, but that is completely up to you.
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Actually is the second time I clear the Update cache since I installed 1809 (I did a clean install). The first time it didn't reinstall the update, but now it did.
However, I DID have it install twice after I clean installed. First time it failed, and the second time it installed fine (some other people in this thread already reported the same behavior).
I guess this version of 10 is still rough around the edges. At this point I don't know if I should format and go back to 1803 or just wait for the next cumulative update to roll out.
No. The updates aren't paused. Those that did upgrade successfully to 1809 will need them. After all, 2.3% of all the Windows 10 computers in the world are now on 1809.
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