“Microsoft is not the answer. Microsoft is the question. NO is the answer.” arsa Erik Naggum.
Theip ar WWW.Microsoft.com (“Thank you for your patience
We are currently experiencing high demand. Please wait and try again later.” arsa WWW.Microsoft.com) agus “Microsoft Customer Enquiries Ireland 1850 94 09 40” arsa leabhar guthán dá bhrí sin dhiailigh mise 1850 94 09 40 ar an 09/07/2024 ag an 11:56r.n. a chlog: “Eighteenfifty numbers are no longer in service.” arsa gléas uathoibríoch. “Microsoft Ireland, [. . .] 295 3826” arsa leabhar guthán dá bhrí sin dhiailigh mise 295 3826 ag nóin:01 . . .
Dúirt oibrí as an Sacs-Bhéarla.
“Níl ríomhaire liom ag bútáil ón ló seo caite mar thiomáin sibh uasghrádú mar dhea trí Fhuinneoga a Deich. Deisígí!” arsa mise dó ach
Dhiailigh mise 295 3826 arís ag nóin:22. Ní chabhraíonn Microsoft liom.
Mhúch mé ríomhaire le Fuinneogaibh 10 lenár muintir ar an 08/07/2024. Thathantaigh Microsoft uasghrádú mar dhea ar son Fuinneog i rith an mhúchta seo, ach scrios Míshórt Salachair bútáil. “Boot Menu
1. Windows Boot Manager” arsa an ríomhaire sin ansin.
Bhíodh an ríomhaire sin ag obair go maith mar shampla ar an 08/07/2024 ag an 2:36i.n. a chlog .i. mionaidean sular thathantaigh Microsoft uasghrádú sin mar dhea.
Cf. “Microsoft released an emergency update to Windows 10, 8.1, and 7 SP1 to address the vulnerability on 3 January 2018,[95][96][97] as well as Windows Server (including Server 2008 R2, Server 2012 R2, and Server 2016) and Windows Embedded Industry.[98] [. . .] The update was found to have caused issues on systems running certain AMD CPUs, with some users reporting that their Windows installations did not boot at all after installation. On 9 January 2018, Microsoft paused the distribution of the update to systems with affected CPUs while it investigated and addressed this bug.[99]” arsa HTTPS://En.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Meltdown_(security_vulnerability).