![]() ![]() Now, about a month later, with a belated thank-you to Mossroy for his workaround. Obviously, an annoyance that I never had in 20.04. To recover, I have to power the desktop off and then restart. The freeze-ups occur about every fourth time. My lock-screen requires my password to complete the re-opening. ![]() Again, I'm pointing out that the Command prompt identifies my 'C' drive as my 'D' drive, and vice-versa, and it almost certainly will misidentify the drives of some others who have a second hard drive in the same way.After I upgraded to Ubuntu 22.04.01 last week, I have occasional freeze-ups on refreshing from a locked screen. (I've seen this sort of drive letter swapping occur before at the Command prompt, though I don't know why it happens.) Finally, to be clear, the "Note" near the end of the above instructions telling the user to enter a letter other than the letter "C" for their OS if their OS is not stored on the 'C' drive is not what I'm talking about here, as my OS is indeed on my 'C' drive. In order to successfully run the above command on my actual 'C' drive, I had to change the letter "C" to "D", because what the Command prompt thinks is my 'D' drive is actually my 'C' drive. However, though my OS is indeed on the 'C' drive, the drive identified as my 'C' drive when the Command prompt was accessed in the WinRE Troubleshoot > Advanced Options menu was not actually my 'C' drive-it was my 'D' drive. Note that the command shown above includes the letter 'c', as you'd expect, to refer to the 'C' drive, that is, the presumed OS drive. Note: If Windows is not stored on the C: drive, replace the C: in the above commands with the appropriate drive letter.Ĭlose the Command Prompt and click Continue to exit the Recovery Environment. In the Command Prompt window, type the command listed below for your version of Windows and press ENTER.įor 32-bit versions of Windows: dism.exe /image:c:\ If prompted for a username/password, you must enter a local administrator account. You may be asked to enter a BitLocker Recovery Key or username/password. ![]() Use the Command Prompt to uninstall the update:Īt the recovery screen, select Troubleshoot, then Advanced Options, and then Command Prompt. How to create and use installation media to load the Recovery Environment If Windows will not automatically boot to the recovery screen, you can also use installation media to enter the Windows 10 Recovery Environment: If you restart the system before Windows finishes loading the desktop three times in a row, Windows should automatically start the Windows 10 Recovery Environment. Start the Windows 10 Recovery Environment. If a working keyboard is not available after installing the update, your keyboard and mouse should work within the Window 10 Recovery Environment, which you can use to restore your system. The following is the solution from TenForums: ![]() It's worth noting that keyboard+mouse work during the UEFI/BIOS boot/startup sequnce, i.e. Issue is caused by a Windows 10 Update, KB4074588, released in February 2018.Īffects USB keyboard/mouse on desktop computers if you have an old PS/2 keyboard/mouse contact (rare on modern computers) it will work, and I believe laptops' own keyboard/touchpads are not affected (only external USB). ![]()
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