Then the Windows Error Reporting will be disabled successfully. Now you can come back to Control Panel to check the status of the feature of Windows Error Reporting. You will notice that the status of Report problems is changed from On to Off. Step 1 : Access to Group Policy in your computer. Step 3 : On the right panel of the interface, find the option of Disable Windows Error Reporting under Settings and then double click it.
Then the feature of Windows Error Reporting will be turned off in your computer. Type services. Step 2 : In the Name column of the Services window, look for Windows Error Reporting Service and double click it to open its properties. Then you can exit the Services window. Privacy policy. This is a level topic moderately advanced. See Resolve Windows 10 upgrade errors for a full list of topics in this article.
When Windows Setup fails, the result and extend code are recorded as an informational event in the Application log by Windows Error Reporting as event The event name is WinSetupDiag The following source will be available only if you have updated from a previous version of Windows 10 to a new version.
If you installed the current version and have not updated, the source named WinSetupDiag02 will be unavailable. Some of them even have solutions. Five years into the Windows 10 era, this is by far the most common complaint, which typically arrives in my inbox in one of two forms.
My humble correspondent stepped away from the PC and discovered upon their return that it had rebooted to install an update, wiping out unsaved work in the process. Equally painful is watching the update progress screen creep along for what seems like hours sometimes it really is hours without being able to get any work done. It didn't help that feature updates came at unexpected times, with distinctly indeterminate time-to-update estimates.
The good news is that loud and sustained feedback from its customers has inspired Windows 10 engineers to adopt a kinder, gentler update regimen now. There are multiple warnings of impending reboots associated with the monthly quality updates, and feature updates are now optional, at least for a year and a half or so. The only way to really prevent unpleasant update surprises is to take charge of the process.
As I was starting to write this article, I opened Microsoft's Feedback Hub so I could see what problems people are reporting right now. It truly is annoying, an argument I made back in in "Avoid Windows 10 crapware: How to get rid of Candy Crush and all the rest.
Microsoft still includes Disney's Magic Kingdom app and the latest mutation in the Candy Crush and Farmville gene pools on my fresh Windows 10 Pro installation. Those of us in the main Windows 10 cabin should prepare to uninstall crapware until further notice. Some people get downright cranky at the thought of all those apps taking up disk space.
The word you see most often in relation to built-in apps is bloatware. Anyway, most of those apps take very little disk space and can be easily ignored if you prefer a third-party alternative. Some, but not all, can be uninstalled. Some, like the built-in Calendar app, are useful in ways you might not expect. For details, see "Windows 10 apps: Which are worth keeping? Which ones should you dump? The Windows 10 Start Can we call it that? Because I really have trouble calling it the "Start experience," as Microsoft's documentation writers do.
But I digress. The Windows 10 Start thingy is an interesting mash-up of Windows 7's Start menu a scrolling, alphabetized list of programs on the left and Windows 8's Start screen a bunch of tiles of various sizes on the right.
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