New
#11
When you open the control panel for Windows Update, you will still see the prompt to install Windows Update Agent 7.6.7600.320. You should be able to click on the link named "Check for updates" in the upper left corner of that interface. That sould start the scan without needing to install Windows Update Agent 7.6.7600.320.
edit: I have heavily edited post #6. Please refer to that post.
Last edited by UsernameIssues; 15 Nov 2015 at 01:52.
If you want to try UserNameIssues' suggestion on installing a specific windows update client - Download the update KB3102810 from the direct download link and replace the first part of the URL (h**p) with http to make it work.
Save the file to desktop.
Then Start> Run then type
[/QUOTE]Code:"C:\Users\Username\Desktop\windows6.1-kb3102810-x64_c5145c2d21519cffb332e678bf22da0a22cf0442.msu" /wuforce
Replace Username in the code above with the account name of the user.
So for me it would be:
[EDIT] See UserNameIssues post below.Code:[/QUOTE]Code:"C:\Users\Chris\Desktop\windows6.1-kb3102810-x64_c5145c2d21519cffb332e678bf22da0a22cf0442.msu" /wuforce
Last edited by Callender; 15 Nov 2015 at 06:14. Reason: add info
Windows Update Agent updates are mandatory - and will happen in the background whatever the WU settings (read your Windows License Terms).
The only thing that will prevent them is turning BITS off completely - which means no updates, ever, unless you do them manually from standalone downloads.
The update is designed to increased the stability of WU, and the security
Why wouldn't you want to install it?
Yes win7 updates are taking a long time usually less than 6 hours (some much longer)
I have my update setting set to:
Check for updates but let me choose whether to download and install them
Old HP laptop recovery, couldn't get pass checking for updates being hung.
After trying a ton of things, installing KB3102810 finally fixed it.
Clicked check for updates, 12min. later 214 new updates - woohoo, thank you!
Sorry for the delay in getting back to everyone. The main problem was my impatience. The kb3102810 actually resolved my issue. My problem was when the standalone installer was checking for updates it took a long time, so I thought it was not working. I finally let it take its course. It ran for a couple of hours and finally found the updates. It also took a long time to install those updates. I did as UsernameIssues suggested and I am happy to say that all updates were installed.
I read where someone posted on Microsoft's forum about update issues. They felt that since Windows 10 started pushing out the updates it could be overwhelming their servers. Also there are people that may feel they have a problem due to not getting updates in a timely manner and either doing a repair and/or clean install, or in my case a recovery. Then when they try to install all those updates it takes a really long time which adds more load on the servers. It seems to make sense. I guess we just need to be patient.
Thanks to all that helped and a special thanks to UsernameIssues.
Take a look at how many and how fast the Windows 10 thing is going:
Just registered so I could say that after letting the scan for updates run for several hours (after a new install of Win 7 Home Premium 32 bit), I found your post after wading through a potload of low-quality advice and "solutions."In my testing (using a W7 Virtual Machine (VM) that only had SP1 installed), installing KB3102810 allowed me to skip the update shown in the screenshot in the original post in this thread. The reason to skip that update is: the scan for the list of Windows updates can take 24+ hours. There have been many threads confirming this long scan time. With KB3102810 installed, the list of 200+ updates came in within 10 minutes (having the VM running on an SSD helps shorten that scan time - your scan time may be longer).
edit3:
December's update to the Windows Update Clients is out.
It can be used in place of KB3102810.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/3112343
I installed the KB3112343 update, changed WU settings to "Download but let me decide" etc., and the 200+ updates came up in less than 10 minutes on a conventional HD (but of course not all updates were actually downloaded). I'm happily updating in batches as we speak. Many thanks for the effort you put into this post.
I too just registered to thank @UsernameIssues and the solution he provided in post #6. What I did from a fresh install of Windows 7 Professional 32-Bit were as follows:
1. After the fresh Windows 7 install, disable internet connection.
2. Change Windows Update settings to "Check for updates but let me choose whether to download and install them."
3. Enable internet connection.
4. Go to Windows Update and select "Check for updates".
5. Select and install only Important Updates relating to Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1). (ignore Recommended Updates completely- see Note* at the bottom of this post). Restart.
6. Do Step 4 again.
7. Do Step 5 again.
8. Download and install the update to Windows Update here (this update is as of December 2015, so do dig around to see if there are newer ones). Restart.
9. Do Step 4 again.
If everything goes well, you should only have to wait less than 10 minutes for Windows Update to list all available updates (mine was a list of 150 important, and around 65 recommended updates).
I hope this heps somebody and credit to the original solution provider for figuring this one out.
Note*: The reason you want to install everything related to Windows 7 SP1 first is because it is a pre-requisite to installing the update to Windows Update in Step 8.
A massive thank you to all who contributed to this thread. The only proper solution as far as i can see, on every forum i checked
Win7 SP1 fresh install with the issue of not updating.
KB3112343 update resolved this.