If you ever tried the infamous “Update and shut down” option in any Windows build, it often leads to a reboot instead to an actual shutdown. Now, Microsoft has finally fixed this issue starting with Windows 11 25H2 Build 26200.7019 (or 26100.7019 on 24H2). According to the Windows Latest, Microsoft has shipped this broken functionality way back with Windows 10, and has never fixed it since. However, the Windows teams working behind the update have finally managed to ship a working solution with a note stating in Windows 11 experiences that the new build: “Addressed underlying issue which can cause “Update and shutdown” to not actually shut down your PC after updating.”

  • Gloria@sh.itjust.works
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    14 hours ago

    Too little too late. Shit like this would not fly in an open OS and is they were only able to do it that long, as they give a shot about customer demands. Fuck these proprietary software! Never again will i be held back by corpo software!

      • sigmaklimgrindset@sopuli.xyz
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        13 hours ago

        “You participate in society yet you criticize it ☝️🤓” comment.

        Furthermore, what do two different mobile OS have to do with a desktop one?

        • PushButton@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          He said: “Fuck these proprietary software! Never again will i be held back by corpo software!”

          No one is making a distinction between mobile and desktop here but you…

          As fas as I can remember, Android and iPhone are proprietary corpo software.

          I hope that helped clearing your confusion, my little bright light.

          • sigmaklimgrindset@sopuli.xyz
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            12 hours ago

            I thought that they were joking, as stuff like this also happens in open software and can take ages to fix (if it’s even kept up to date for a lot of niche software), and most of us use SOME sort proprietary software even if there’s a bigger % of open source enthusiasts on Lemmy.

            That’s why the Android/iOS comment was even more out of place.

            But then again, this is Lemmy…it might have been literal…