Windows 11: you should quickly uninstall this update


Merouan Goumiri

May 10, 2022 at 7:15 p.m.

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windows 11

© Microsoft

If, most of the time, the updates arrive with their batch of patches, it also happens that these last drag behind them some cannonballs. And unfortunately, this is the case with the latest optional update of Windows 11. So much so that even Microsoft strongly encourages you to uninstall it…

Its name is KB5012643, and it might cause you a few problems if you install the latest optional update to Microsoft’s operating system.

Windows 11: an update to avoid?

If you are using Windows 11, you may have already noticed the mention “.NET Framework. in Windows Update Installer. Simply put, it is a software infrastructure necessary for the proper functioning of certain applications on Windows operating systems.

However, as reported by the site Windows Latest, it would seem that the latest optional update, the one with the name of KB5012643, breaks the integration of .NET Framework within Windows 11 (version 21H2). In other words, some applications that need this infrastructure to be operational are now no longer able to function properly, to the point of crashing or no longer being able to start on your computer.

Following this finding, Microsoft itself therefore encourages Windows 11 users to uninstall this problematic update without further delay. To do this, go to the history of Windows Update updates, search for “KB5012643”, and finally, select the latter to uninstall it. For the others, we obviously encourage you not to install this update if you have not done so.

Windows 11

To download

Read the notice


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Windows 11

  • Graphical redesign of the successful interface
  • Improved Snap
  • Effective anchor groups

To be completely honest, Windows 11 seems to us to be a good evolution of Windows 10. Beyond the very marketing aspect linked to the surprise effect (Windows 10 was presented as the last of the last, remember) and to the essentially graphical redesign of the interface, the update brings a bit of clarity and modernity that are welcome after six years spent with an OS designed to reconcile Microsoft and its audience. We also like the discreet details that make it more functional, such as the improved snap and anchor groups, or even the refined management of virtual desktops. Finally, we are really convinced by the redesign of the Microsoft Store. By agreeing to return to the exclusivity reserved for UWPs, Microsoft is effectively hitting where it is not expected and finally compels itself to catch up on Apple and Google.

To be completely honest, Windows 11 seems to us to be a good evolution of Windows 10. Beyond the very marketing aspect linked to the surprise effect (Windows 10 was presented as the last of the last, remember) and to the essentially graphical redesign of the interface, the update brings a bit of clarity and modernity that are welcome after six years spent with an OS designed to reconcile Microsoft and its audience. We also like the discreet details that make it more functional, such as the improved snap and anchor groups, or even the refined management of virtual desktops. Finally, we are really convinced by the redesign of the Microsoft Store. By agreeing to return to the exclusivity reserved for UWPs, Microsoft is effectively hitting where it is not expected and finally compels itself to catch up on Apple and Google.

On the same subject :
Windows 11: discover in pictures the future of the Microsoft email client (and it’s something other than Mail)

Source : Windows Latest



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