Disable Windows 10 automatic restart after updates

Anonymous
2019-02-14T12:17:31+00:00

Is there any REAL way to disable this cancer feature?

This is not the first time i have lost unsaved work due to this annoying function, that almost every Windows user hates.

I'm trying to behave, but it is really hard to keep calm after loosing unsaved work multiple times.

Why is it that Windows cannot just wait until the user decides to restart at a convenient time? It's not like the end of the world that users doesn't restart at a specific time.

In a time where Apple's Mac is already "stealing" a lot of Windows customers, it is a very risky (and dumb) feature to add to Windows.

This alone is very difficult to argue against in a Mac vs. Windows discussion.

Luckily (for Microsoft) Microsoft have secured themselves from a law suit in their policy.

MS knows that all Windows users hates this feature, and yet they still have it. WHY?

So back to the question. Is there any official/unofficial way (FOR GOOD)  that allows me to disable this annoying feature?

I tried following some tutorials on YouTube, but little did it help obviously, as i just came home and found my computer restarted, and my work deleted.

Windows for home | Windows 10 | Settings

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  1. Anonymous
    2019-02-15T16:12:22+00:00

    Is there any REAL way to disable this cancer feature?

    Yes, of course. Setup active hours.

    Start menu -- Settings app -- Update and Security -- Windows Update -- Change active hours

    Thanks for your answer - but it's not useful. 

    I asked if there is a way to REALLY disable automatic restart, and you answer me on how to change active hours.

    2 very different things.

    1,768 people found this answer helpful.
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  2. Anonymous
    2019-05-03T01:32:26+00:00

    1: Only some hate this feature and I am not one of them. So happy!

    1. What update is it? Only updates like the cumulative ones and cumulative.net... requires a restart. Plus, it will only ask for a restart after the update (cumulative) is done downloading and finished installing. Actually, after restarting, then it will counts as a successful install. Normally, Windows will not ask for a restart, or automatically restart, never heard off automatically restart unless it pertains to that update. I never have that issue before.

    Well, count me as another who hates it.  Giving me no option after downloading and installing an update (which does not warn the user of this ahead of time) other than to have my computer restart without my consent once my active hours (which can only be set to a maximum of 18 hours) are over.... that's simply not acceptable.  There is no valid reason to prevent users from postponing the restart for as long as we wish, and doing it at a time of our choosing.  Anything else leaves me inclined to disable updates altogether.  These are *our* computers, not Microsoft's.  If they can't understand that, they'll be left in Linux's dust.

    For those that consider Linux too small a contender for that last sentence to be anything but a joke:  consider that Android is just a modified Linux OS, and currently holds the largest market share among all internet-connected devices, having overtaken Windows by 2017.  Not long after Windows 10 was released, come to think...

    And if you search on Microsoft's own bing.com for <disable windows 10 update automatic restart>, you get over 28 million results.  That's more than if you search "Avengers Endgame", for an indication of how popular the idea of disabling this "feature" is.  When a customer asks for something, a smart business doesn't respond by trying to tell the customer why they shouldn't want that instead of actually giving it to them.  And no, I'm not going to pay for a more expensive version of Windows so that I can use gpedit to disable this stupidity that never should have existed in the first place.  Trying to frustrate me into paying more isn't a great business plan, either.

    1,674 people found this answer helpful.
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  3. Anonymous
    2019-02-14T12:25:43+00:00

    Hello my name is Bradford and I'm an Independent Advisor for the Microsoft Community and I will try to resolve your problem.

    1. Click on the “Start” button and type

    gpedit.msc

    press Enter.

    1. In the Local Group Policy Editor, go to
           Computer Configuration -&gt; 
      
                  -&gt;Administrative Templates-&gt; 
      
                        -&gt; Windows Components-&gt;
      
                                -&gt; Windows Update
      
    2. Double-click on “No auto-restart with automatic installations of scheduled updates”.
    3. Select "Enabled", and then click "OK".
    4. Close the local group policy editor.

    If the above steps don't have the effect you desired please let me know!

    2,270 people found this answer helpful.
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  4. Anonymous
    2019-04-14T17:42:21+00:00

    I have the same issue. I am running computer simulations on my machine which take hours to days. You come back to your machine and it has rebooted, hussah! This is my machine and if I want to use it to make a living I don't want to lose work just because you morons think that an automatic reboot is a funny idea!

    I don't want to change active hours. I tried the UpdateOrchestrator option but it already says "Disabled" for reboot, so that obviously doesn't work. And I don't have Windows 10 Pro so I can't use the gpedit option.

    GET RID OF THIS F.....G BEHAVIOUR!

    1,225 people found this answer helpful.
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  5. Anonymous
    2019-02-14T12:22:19+00:00

    Is there any REAL way to disable this cancer feature?

    Yes, of course. Setup active hours.

    Start menu -- Settings app -- Update and Security -- Windows Update -- Change active hours

    69 people found this answer helpful.
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