Endless Update Attempts On PC Shutdown

asokas

New member
Local time
8:18 AM
Messages
11
Hello,

Every time I shut down the PC, Windows 7 tries to install 9 updates. Next day, when I shut down again, I find it is again trying to install 9 updates. It keeps doing this over and over, forever. Yesterday, the number went up to 11.

It looks like something causes the update procedure to fail and so it keeps on trying the same updates over and over again, seemingly forever. It is frankly a mystery to me as to WHY it should fail in the first place, since it it basically Windows 7 trying to update Windows 7. What could be the problem with that?! But there we are...

Anyway, it wastes a lot of time when I am waiting for the computer to shut down, which seems to take 10-15 minutes nowadays. Is there any way to get the updates to work, or else to stop it doing this the whole time?

On a related issue, it seems to be impossible to upgrade to IE9. I tried doing this manually several times but keep finding that it unwinds back to IE8. I was told by my computer person that the only was to do it is to do a complete new installation of Windows 7, but this will wipe out everything I have installed, which could take days or weeks to reinstall again. Hence, this is not an option.

Any ideas on any of the above would be appreciated. Thank you.

Asoka
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
You could try a manual update by opening Control Panel and clicking on Windows Update. See if they will install from there. If not, look at the Windows Update log file to see what errors there are.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo IdeaCenter 450
OS
Windows 10 Pro X64
CPU
Intel Quad Core i7-4770 @ 3.4Ghz
Memory
16.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3 SDRAM 1600 MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel Integrated HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek HD Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
HP 22" LCD
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
250GB Samsung EVO SATA-3 SSD
2TB Seagate ST2000DM001 SATA-2
1.5TB Seagate ST3150041AS SATA
Keyboard
Dell USB
Mouse
Lenovo USB
Internet Speed
Cable via Road Runner 3MB Upload, 30MB Download
Antivirus
Windows Defender, MBAM Pro, MBAE
Browser
Seamonkey
Other Info
UEFI/GPT
PLDS DVD-RW DH16AERSH
Hello,



To Ztruker: I will try what you suggest. Thank you.

Asoka
 
Last edited by a moderator:

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
I have the same thing happening. Every time I shut down it's installing 5 updates.=/
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
No idea...
OS
Windows 7
CPU
3.6GhZ
Motherboard
Uhmm...
Memory
4GB RAM?
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550ti
Sound Card
Dunno.
Monitor(s) Displays
Ehh...?
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
C:
D:
PSU
What?
Case
Case?
Cooling
Cool... yeah.
Hello,

To 1Bowtie: I don't believe I mentioned anything about Vista at all. I am on Windows 7 Home Premium.

If, from me just making a post here, you are somehow able to detect my PC's operating systems, then yes, I do have an old Vista installation on a dual-boot PC. However, this was from the early days when I transferred over to Windows 7 and I no longer use that anymore whatsoever. I only boot up in Windows 7.

If you can show me where I go to get the system specs, then I will happily post them here. Thank you.


Asoka

If you look to the left below your name and join date you will see Vista Home Premium, under that lower left corner you will see System Spec's, click on that and you will see OS Vista Home Premium. Thank you
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell XPS 730
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
CPU
Intel Core 2 quad Extreme Q9770 @ 3.2 GHz
Memory
4x2 GB Muskin 1600 MHz ram
Graphics Card(s)
NVidia GTX 250
Sound Card
Soundblaster X-Fi Fatality Champion
Monitor(s) Displays
2 Dell 2007WFP Ultrascans
Screen Resolution
3360 x 1050
Hard Drives
WD Black 1TB sata, 2-WD Black 500 sata, 2-Seagate 500 Go external
PSU
1000 Watt
Cooling
air
Keyboard
MS Natrual Keyboard Pro
Mouse
Logitech Wireless Trackball
Internet Speed
DSL Elite
I've encountered similar problems. In some cases a manual install from the windows website solved my issues. Try opening your windows update app and try installing from that menu, you should be able to see an installation failure there, and you may have a link provided directly to Microsoft and that might save you some time searching around. Additionally, you can check your installed update list to see if any of those updates actually DID install already, in which case you only have to ignore the repeating ones.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 64 Pro
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