![]() “Windows XP Professional Service Pack 1 or At least Windows 2000 Service Pack 3” Yes I can confirm that using the Local Group Policy Editor’s ‘Configure Auto Updates’ setting still works despite (a) no immediate feedback in the Windows Update window and (b) despite the nebulous wording in the “Supported On” box which says ![]() ![]() #2) WOW, did I stumble into a hornets nest w/ Win 10 Pro ver. intelligent problem-solving discourse w/ ppl who understand the concept of testing, re-testing and learning to adapt to a moving target – which sadly is what Win 10 is. I breath a sigh of relief.ĭEF: “no BS” …. I have spent a full day reading up on “the problem” and yours is the only current and 100% no B.S. When new updates are available, the user will receive a systray message. I also tried the setting Notify for download and notify for install in Windows 10 1607, and it worked as expected. Even after several hours, no new updates appeared in the Update History. With the help of the networking monitoring tool, I could see that Windows downloaded a couple of megabytes from Windows Update, but then stopped. However, when I disabled the Automatic Updates via Group Policy, no downloads were shown. The Windows Update settings usually displays the updates that are currently downloaded. When I gave my test machine access to the internet, without enabling any update policy, Windows Update always began by downloading new updates after a couple of minutes. However, based on my tests, the Anniversary Update still supports these policies. If you apply any of the policies to Windows 10 1607, the Windows Updates settings don't show any information about the configuration. End user cant change Windows Update settings in Windows 10 1511
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