KB5005565 Windows 10 2004 19041.1237, 20H2 19042.1237, 21H1 19043.1237 Win Update

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  1. Posts : 131
    MSWindows 10 Enterprise 64bits build (21H2) 19044.1466
       #170

    Updated to 19043.1237 but system stay slowly...

    --- FRESH CLEAN INSTALL USING ISO OFFLINE AS ALWAYS...
    --- Update by MSUpdate panel
    --- My NETWORK CARD stay with NO DATA on TaskMan panel... ??? help me...

    OBS: MY TaskMan is very slow later update... NO ANTIVIRUS OR INTERNET JUST SYSTEM WITH NO ANOTHER SOFTWARE INSTALLED FOR WHILE...

    KB5005565 Windows 10 2004 19041.1237, 20H2 19042.1237, 21H1 19043.1237-image.png
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 177
    Windows 10
       #171

    emailx45 said:
    Updated to 19043.1237 but system stay slowly...

    --- FRESH CLEAN INSTALL USING ISO OFFLINE AS ALWAYS...
    --- Update by MSUpdate panel
    --- My NETWORK CARD stay with NO DATA on TaskMan panel... ??? help me...

    OBS: MY TaskMan is very slow later update... NO ANTIVIRUS OR INTERNET JUST SYSTEM WITH NO ANOTHER SOFTWARE INSTALLED FOR WHILE...

    KB5005565 Windows 10 2004 19041.1237, 20H2 19042.1237, 21H1 19043.1237-image.png

    Sometimes an update will leave your system disk very fragmented, and a lot of system processes in progress. Your system may be entirely unresponsive for some time. How long that lasts depends on your system, the update, your HD and how fast it is, your processor, etc. Click the "Performance" tab on your Task Manager, then wait for that screen to populate to get an idea of what part of your system is the bottleneck (usually the system disk).

    Patience is a virtue. Eventually your system will get all its housecleaning done and will return to normal. You can also manually defrag your system disk. You can see whether defragmentinging your system disk is needed. From an Administrative Command Prompt, try

    defrag C: /A

    where C: is the system partition. After a few minutes, you will get a summary of the fragmentation status of your system disk, concluding with a message like "You do not need to defragment this volume." If the messages says that you DO need to defragment the volume, or if you decide to defragment the volume anyway, use

    defrag C:

    or

    defrag C: /B [the /B option optimizes boot time].
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 2,832
    Windows 10 Pro X64
       #172

    Hi,

    From looking at emailx45's system specs his system disk seems to be an SSD which you should not defragment at all.
    It basically takes care of itself.

    Cheers,
      My Computers


  4. Posts : 177
    Windows 10
       #173

    I should have mentioned this: after each upgrade, particularly one that takes a long time or otherwise indicates that it has made significant changes to your system disk, run, from a command prompt with Administrative priveges,

    sfc.exe /scannow

    If it finds cross-linked folders (which it does on two of my computers, regularly), reboot and run it again. The second time it should find no errors, but if it does, reboot and run it again.

    Once SFC gives your system a clean bill of health, make sure that all the other Windows files are OK with

    dism.exe /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth

    - - - Updated - - -

    Motorfingers said:
    I should have mentioned this: after each upgrade, particularly one that takes a long time or otherwise indicates that it has made significant changes to your system disk, run, from a command prompt with Administrative priveges,

    sfc.exe /scannow

    If it finds cross-linked folders (which it does on two of my computers, regularly), reboot and run it again. The second time it should find no errors, but if it does, reboot and run it again.

    Once SFC gives your system a clean bill of health, make sure that all the other Windows files are OK with

    dism.exe /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth

    Please understand if I disagree. SSDs fragment too, but running a defragger on an SSD the same way that you run it on an ordinary HD is unwise, because some things like seek time are negligible on an SSD, and read/write speeds are very high on any SSD. Most importantly, most SSDs have a life limited by the number of write operations, and ordinary defragging does a lot of writes. Most modern defraggers, including the one included with Windows 10, have special options to perform the proper operations on SSDs to optimize their performance while minimizing write operations:

    defrag C: [ /O | /Optimize { Perform the proper optimization for each media type.}]
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 131
    MSWindows 10 Enterprise 64bits build (21H2) 19044.1466
       #174

    hey people, as I said... this install was CLEAN INSTALL using a ISO today.

    before this update I used same ISO before this installation on my pc.

    I7 4770K, 16GB DUAL, GTX 1650 SUPER 4G, SSD120 GB just for MSWindows, ASUS SABERTOOTH Z87.

    the pc is very good, as you see.
    I used for play games like Ass. Creed Valhala and many others.

    I think that was thus new update 19043.1237 because before it was ok speed.

    I used format my disk because this... taskman showing slow.

    any thing i was waiting somebody w same problem.

    - - - Updated - - -

    the speed on pc is ok at general. or be, i dont see problem with apps just Taskman slow
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 177
    Windows 10
       #175

    emailx45 said:
    hey people, as I said... this install was CLEAN INSTALL using a ISO today.

    before this update I used same ISO before this installation on my pc.

    I7 4770K, 16GB DUAL, GTX 1650 SUPER 4G, SSD120 GB just for MSWindows, ASUS SABERTOOTH Z87.

    the pc is very good, as you see.
    I used for play games like Ass. Creed Valhala and many others.

    I think that was thus new update 19043.1237 because before it was ok speed.

    I used format my disk because this... taskman showing slow.

    any thing i was waiting somebody w same problem.

    - - - Updated - - -

    the speed on pc is ok at general. or be, i dont see problem with apps just Taskman slow

    Perform these commands with a Command Prompt (Admin), which you get by right-clicking on Start and selecting that.

    sfc.exe /scannow

    That command will take several minutes. If it detects any errors and corrects them, reboot and repeat the command until you it no longer detects errors. When it does finish and detects no errors, run

    dism.exe /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth

    Then, reboot, log in, and leave the computer alone for 20 minutes. It should then be normal.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 131
    MSWindows 10 Enterprise 64bits build (21H2) 19044.1466
       #176

    @Motorfingers
    thanks let's try it again :)))))
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 177
    Windows 10
       #177

    emailx45 said:
    @Motorfingers
    thanks let's try it again :)))))
    If you haven't solved your problem yet, here's a simplification of use of the "clean up Windows 10" commands.
    First, right-click on the Start button (the tiny Windows icon in the lower left corner of the screen). This brings up a black list of options, beginning (on my computer) with "Apps and Features," with "Command Prompt (Admin)" in the middle, and ending with "Desktop." Left-click on "Command Prompt (Admin)" and click YES when you get the prompt "Do you want to allow this application to make changes to your device." This opens a command prompt window with administrative privileges.
    Copy this command into your clipboard:
    sfc.exe /scannow
    Then, copy it into your command prompt window and press <Enter>. The response will be "Beginning system scan. This process will take some time." You will then get a line that tells you the progress, such as "Verification 47% complete." When the process is complete, you will get a message that tells you whether the operation found and fixed errors, or whether SFC found no errors. The no errors message is "Windows Resource Protection did not find any integrity violations." If you get any other message, you can repeat the command; it is best to reboot and start over so that the fixes are in full effect when SFC runs again.

    When SFC finds no errors, you can make sure that the rest of your Windows 10 files are OK by running DISM from a command prompt with administrative privileges:

    dism.exe /online /cleanup-image /restorehealth
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 10
    Windows 10
       #178

    Has anyone had issues installing this update? I'm on attempt #4 in trying to get this to stick.

    I've stopped the update service, deleted the previous update files, restarted the service, rebooted and still Windows can't apply this.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 21,421
    19044.1586 - 21H2 Pro x64
       #179

    bonocity said:
    Has anyone had issues installing this update? I'm on attempt #4 in trying to get this to stick.

    I've stopped the update service, deleted the previous update files, restarted the service, rebooted and still Windows can't apply this.
    Have you tried installing it by downloading the KB MSU linked towards the bottom of the OP?

    User @desbest couldn't install it initially, then found a solution:
    Cumulative Updates for Windows 10 Won't Install
      My Computer


 

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