- #UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 HOW TO#
- #UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 INSTALL#
- #UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 UPDATE#
- #UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 WINDOWS 7#
German blog reader Olaf Becker reported the bug in this comment (I've translated his report).
#UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 UPDATE#
ReFS support missing after Windows Server 2012 R2 updatesĪfter installing updates KB5009624 (Monthly Rollup for Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2) and KB5009595 (Security Only Quality Update for Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2) support for the ReFS file system is missing. If someone has problems with other Hyper-V versions, he can leave a comment. If the Hyper-V of other Windows Server versions is affected, I can't say exactly at the moment. Currently, the only thing left to do is to uninstall the security update in question. So the problem is confirmed, and is being investigated, and the fix is supposed to be available in one of the upcoming releases.
#UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 INSTALL#
Until further information from Microsoft is available, the only option is to not install the update if you are affected.
#UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 WINDOWS 7#
Whether also the updates for Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1: Update KB5009555 (Windows Server 2022) – see also Patchday: Windows 11 Updates (January 11, 2022).Update KB5009557 (Windows 10 Enterprise Version 1909 LTSC und Windows Server 2018).Update KB5009545 (Windows 10 Enterprise Version 1909 und Windows Server 2019).Update KB5009543 (Windows 10 Version 20H2 – 21H2 und Windows Server Version 20H2).Update KB5009619 (Security Only Quality Update for Windows Server 2012, Windows Embedded 8 Standard).Update KB5009586 (Monthly Rollup for Windows Server 2012, Windows Embedded 8 Standard).Update KB5009595 (Security Only Quality Update for Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2).Update KB5009624 (Monthly Rollup for Windows 8.1 and Windows Server 2012 R2).Potentially affected are updates for the following server versions:
#UPDATE MICROSOFT WORD 2008 HOW TO#
I had reported the problems in the blog posts Patchday: Windows 8.1/Server 2012 R2 Updates (January 11, 2022), boot loop reported and Windows Server: January 2022 security updates are causing DC boot loop, and also gave hints there on how to uninstall the affected security updates (if necessary, disconnect the network connection to get enough time to uninstall). Below is a screenshot of a German system telling the user that the computer will be rebootet automatically within a minute. The processes lsass.exe or wininit.exe (depending on the Windows Server version) cause an error 0xc00005 (access denied), which then leads to a reboot. The January 2022 update for Windows Server triggers cyclic reboots on some domain controllers (sometimes at intervals of 15 minutes). The following is an outline of the current status. Microsoft has partially confirmed the issues – and the updates hasn't been offered for a few hours via Windows Update – but now are available again, as blog readers told me. The problems whose consequences were promptly addressed in my blogs (see links at the article end). On January 11, 2022, Microsoft did release numerous security updates for Windows, which resulted in severe collateral damage (DC boot loops, VPN connections blocked, ReFS broken, Hyper-V broken).