fincoder Well-Known Member Reaction score 1,147 Location Australia Oct 9, 2023 #21 britechguy said: Using Restart instead guarantees a fresh reload of Windows Click to expand... As does holding Shift when doing shutdown.
britechguy said: Using Restart instead guarantees a fresh reload of Windows Click to expand... As does holding Shift when doing shutdown.
Rigo Active Member Reaction score 166 Location Australia Oct 9, 2023 #22 Problem fixed but here is a blurb about where it might have been coming from, most likely the MS account connection, though I've never encountered it I’m sorry to hear that you’re having trouble logging in to your Inspiron 7777 AIO. According to a post on the Microsoft Community forum, a 2-hour wait time on the login page can occur if there are unexpected shutdowns 1. It seems that this is a security feature built into a Microsoft Account to help protect your account from hacking, and it cannot be removed 1. However, you can switch your Windows login to a Local Account instead of a Microsoft Account to stop this from happening 1. If you’re experiencing crashes every hour or so due to a faulty power supply, it’s recommended that you replace the hardware first 1. If you’re still having issues with logging in after replacing the hardware, you can try running Windows Update and downloading and installing all updates 2. You can also try running a full system scan with Microsoft Defender 2. If you have an HDD hard disk, try running defragmentation 2. I hope this helps!
Problem fixed but here is a blurb about where it might have been coming from, most likely the MS account connection, though I've never encountered it I’m sorry to hear that you’re having trouble logging in to your Inspiron 7777 AIO. According to a post on the Microsoft Community forum, a 2-hour wait time on the login page can occur if there are unexpected shutdowns 1. It seems that this is a security feature built into a Microsoft Account to help protect your account from hacking, and it cannot be removed 1. However, you can switch your Windows login to a Local Account instead of a Microsoft Account to stop this from happening 1. If you’re experiencing crashes every hour or so due to a faulty power supply, it’s recommended that you replace the hardware first 1. If you’re still having issues with logging in after replacing the hardware, you can try running Windows Update and downloading and installing all updates 2. You can also try running a full system scan with Microsoft Defender 2. If you have an HDD hard disk, try running defragmentation 2. I hope this helps!
Philippe Well-Known Member Reaction score 404 Location France Oct 9, 2023 #23 britechguy said: Or use the Everything Search from Voidtools. Click to expand... Looks like "dir /s" to me
britechguy said: Or use the Everything Search from Voidtools. Click to expand... Looks like "dir /s" to me
britechguy Well-Known Member Reaction score 4,788 Location Staunton, VA Oct 9, 2023 #24 Philippe said: Looks like "dir /s" to me Click to expand... But much easier to manage. There are things I really like a GUI for, and this is one of them. Heaven knows, though, I still use Command Prompt alone or under Terminal plenty!
Philippe said: Looks like "dir /s" to me Click to expand... But much easier to manage. There are things I really like a GUI for, and this is one of them. Heaven knows, though, I still use Command Prompt alone or under Terminal plenty!