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23 minutes ago, Renozuken said:

When windows auto updates while I'm work I come home to my pc off but the lights are on in the inside and when I turn it off and back on it takes forever to boot/finish updating. Is there a known fix to this?

Here are my specs

https://prnt.sc/pf5j1q

you can disable auto update, though it might turn itself on occasionally. They usually try to have auto update off on test rigs at LMG for similar reasons, something Luke and Linus have briefly discussed on WAN show. Windows update has taken a half an hour to an hour to finish on first boot for me (mostly for realy big revisions over WiFi so maybe try an Ethernet connection when possible to speed things up), not sure if that is what your experiencing. 

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3 minutes ago, doomsriker said:

you can disable auto update, though it might turn itself on occasionally. They usually try to have auto update off on test rigs at LMG for similar reasons, something Luke and Linus have briefly discussed on WAN show. Windows update has taken a half an hour to an hour to finish on first boot for me (mostly for realy big revisions over WiFi so maybe try an Ethernet connection when possible to speed things up), not sure if that is what your experiencing. 

So I'm fine with windows updating while I'm gone, the problem is that when it goes to restart and finish updating it gets stuck while trying to restart or something and I have to power cycle it to get it to finish the update.

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Just now, Renozuken said:

So I'm fine with windows updating while I'm gone, the problem is that when it goes to restart and finish updating it gets stuck while trying to restart or something and I have to power cycle it to get it to finish the update.

Stuck in what way? like I said it is not uncommon for some updates to take a really long time (30min plus) especially over WiFi. The first boot after an update can often represent much of (sometimes most of) the actual downloads. By power cycling you might be halting the update and forcing windows to revert which could cause major issues long term.    

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Just now, doomsriker said:

Stuck in what way? like I said it is not uncommon for some updates to take a really long time (30min plus) especially over WiFi. The first boot after an update can often represent much of (sometimes most of) the actual downloads. By power cycling you might be halting the update and forcing windows to revert which could cause major issues long term.    

Like I come home and the lights on my fans are on but everything else is off.

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