Hoping I can get some help here because Google isn't understanding my questions, lol. I'm working on a WSUS project where all workstations are just hanging at 99 percent. There's a lot.... I'm looking and the reason is because there's updates that aren't approved.

I agree, it is probably an update that is not approved, or not fully approved for that group. You can group the All Updates list by approval. I find it annoying myself, since I keep a few updates not approved so that I can either deploy by another method or wait on it for whatever reason, and it messes up the totals. I wish the percentage was based on the percentage of approved updates installed.



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I am facing issue with my wsus isolated server as it shows all client 99 percent updated and when I check on client side and tried to update it showed "up to date". I already reset wsus even I installed new client machine on which same issue occurred, So I created again isolated WSUS server but still it shows 99 percent client updated. 

Let me tell you the process by which i created isolated wsus server. 

As I took backup of wsus folder from internet wsus server which contains both updateservicepackages and wsus content and restore it on isolated network.

You said you ran wsusutil reset - but you didn't say on what server. You should run a wsusutil reset on the ONLINE server - wait 24 hours, and then re-run the export/import and copy over the entire contents of the WsusContent folder.

Dear Adam, 

I ran wsusutil reset on internet server as well as on isolated server also after wait 24 hrs I re-run export and copy entire wsuscontent and move to isolated server but still wsus isolated server shows 99 percent client updated, I checked client machine and click on windows update but it showed me up to date.

In both reports you specify the overall percentage of computers with "incomplete updates". The term "incomplete" is not defined in the WSUS or Patch Manager vocabularly, so first we'll need to determine what you mean by "incomplete". Consider these variations:

Working from the presumption that "incomplete updates" only includes approved updates that are not yet installed, makes this a bit easier. However, working with percentages does complicate things a bit. Compliance data is calculated in the WSUS server by updates, and by computers. That is to say, we can get the percentage of updates in each of the states for a computer, or we can get the percentage of computers in each of the states for an update.

In order to split those percentages by WSUS server or by Update Source, will require you to build a report with raw counts and then calculate the percentages according to those groupings. Both WSUS Server and Update Source are attributes of an Update, so you'll need to build a report that provides raw counts by Update, and then aggregate on the Update Source and/or WSUS Server value. For each update on each WSUS server you'll have a row of data providing counts (the number of computers in each state for that update). If you aggregate the count data without the WSUS Server column, you'll aggregate across all servers containing that update; if you aggregate the count data with the WSUS Server column, then you'll get a separate aggregation for each WSUS Server/Update pair.

For report #2, start with the Approved Summary with percentages and computer counts report. Remove the percentages columns, Update Title, Security Bulletins and Release Date. Add the Update Source column, add any additional "count" columns you need (including Approved Total Count). Configure the count columns with a SUM aggregate. Export to Excel and calculate the percentages.

In this scenario, Windows Update stops at 13 percent during the "Configuring Windows Updates" step. After about 15 minutes, the system restarts automatically. Additionally, the updates is not installed and you receive the following error message:



By using this service, you agree to have your patch installation statistics recorded by the server. These statistics are extremely useful for IS&T to determine what percent of the Windows community is protected when high-profile vulnerabilities arise and to warn system owners if that system failed to apply a particular patch.

This trio of percentages offers insight into high CPU usage. PrivilegedTime is the time the CPU spends processing instructions from kernel-mode programs, DPCTime is the time the CPU spends processing deferred procedure calls, and InterruptTime is the time the CPU spends handling interrupts. It should be noted that the processor regularly issues interrupts to switch context to a new thread, so you should expect some level of background noise for this metric.

Systems that are spending 30 percent or more of their time processing privileged instructions should be inspected. First, examine DPCTime and InterruptTime; if either value exceeds 20 percent, a hardware issue is likely to be the culprit. You can use a tool like xperf (bundled with Windows) to dig deeper into the offending process.

Maintaining ample free disk space is a necessity for any operating system. Beyond regular processes requiring disk, core system processes store logs and other kinds of data on disk. Windows will issue a warning if your available disk space drops below 15 percent, but you should alert on this metric to catch the smoke before the fire.

Over the last two years, 60 percent of companies that suffered a breach determined that the culprits were systems that were not updated properly, according to research from Dark Reading. The practice of patching software, servers, computers, and other endpoints has long been one of the most tedious, albeit most important, things an IT team needs to do. The report from Dark Reading just emphasizes that point. In fact, in an age when most updating and patch management is able to be automated, there is little excuse for so many breaches to be attributed to this cause.

Reception of Windows 11 upon its reveal was positive, with critics praising the new design and productivity features.[156] However, Microsoft was criticized for creating confusion over the minimum system requirements for Windows 11.[157] The increased system requirements (compared to those of Windows 10) initially published by Microsoft meant that up to 60 percent of existing Windows 10 PCs were unable to upgrade to Windows 11,[158] which has faced concerns that this will make the devices electronic waste.[159]

The New Jersey Turnpike Authority has approved a new budget of $2.6 billion, which includes a toll increase of three percent for the Garden State Parkway and the New Jersey Turnpike. The hike was passed during a meeting held by the commissioners and is set to take effect from the first day of January next year.

How comes the issue that updates are underway on Windows 11? It is possible that the updates are being downloaded in the background but the percentage marker freezes due to slow Internet connection speed or power interruptions. Also, incompatible drivers like conexant audio device drivers can cause Windows 11 installation stuck. How to get past this issue? Please move on to the next part.

In a recent alert, the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team (US-CERT) said that about 85 percent of successful security breaches involve systems that have not been patched. A recent study by research firm Voke Media found that 82 percent of security breaches since 2015 occurred due to unapplied patches that had been available for up to a year.

Looking at market share data puts the percentage of servers running on an out-of-support Windows operating system (such as Windows 2008, 2008r2, 2012 and 2012 r2), at around 10% of all servers in use today.

To be more specific, my use case is that I have a build process that involves several steps (not in a loop) and at the conclusion of each step, I would like to display a progress with a percentage of the total steps that have completed. Do you think the Show-Progress function will suffice for such use case?

Imagine this: With no warning, a prompt pops up on your screen telling you that your Windows 10 laptop is about to restart. Even though you know you're about to lose access to your computer, there's not a damn thing you can do about it -- the buttons are all grayed out. If you're really unlucky and Windows is installing a major update, the progress meter may be a tease: Once it reaches 100 percent, your computer might reboot a second or third time before you finally get control again.

All software products have a lifecycle. End of support refers to the date when Microsoft no longer provides automatic fixes, updates, or online technical assistance. [2] As of February 2014, nearly 30 percent of Internet-connected PCs still run Windows XP. [3]

Configure peer distribution on your Windows devices with the Peer Distribution Windows Desktop Profile. Peer distribution supports Distributed, Hosted and Local BranchCache modes along with their configuration settings; disk space percentage and max cache age. You can also view the BranchCache Statistics of an application from the Peer Distribution Details panel under Apps&Books > Native > List View > Application Details.

Each school must maintain its declared nights of service per week as certified in its submitted school calendar. For each month that a school does not maintain 25 percent of the residency shown in its submitted calendar, the school will lose one-tenth of its current year allocation. e24fc04721

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