Doing so actually means if there are any updates ready to be installed, go ahead and install them. I have a rule in patching: to never, ever click on the “Check for Updates” option in Windows 10. There have been a number of responses from readers in one case, the poster said, “Windows 11 does start installing without user input.” Another user said he clicked on the “Check for Updates” button, which triggered the install of Windows 11.Īnd therein lies my recommendation for those who don’t want updates - and specifically, Windows 11 - disturbing your computing experience. And I urged anyone who had inadvertently received Windows 11 to reach out to me. I wrote last week about how you can roll back to Windows 10 if you somehow received Windows 11 and don’t want to keep it. But in other cases, the Windows 11 install trigger is much less obvious. It appears the user inadvertently approved the update. (Yes, there have been cases where people signed up for the Microsoft insider program and Windows 11 was installed. Next are the interesting reports I’ve seen about Windows 11 getting installed on systems where a user didn’t approve the installation. Given that most users are probably not running PCs that support Windows 11, the addition of the tool just rubs that fact in our face. This isn’t an update being offered, it’s one that is very obviously being pushed. To add insult to injury, the PC Health tool is not un-installable through the normal update history panel you have to go through applications and features to find and remove it from your system. It’s even being installed on PCs that don’t have the necessary processor to support Windows 11. Let’s start with Microsoft pushing KB5005463 - the PC Health Check Application - onto Windows 10 machines. Case in point: Microsoft’s update behavior.
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