However, it appears that during the installation process of the April 2018 Update, Windows 10 disables System Restore again without notifying the user.
Yes, I still use it, but usually on Win 8, 7 or earlier machines. Have not, so far, found a situation with W10 that needed it.Does anyone actually use System Restore these days? It seems the only time it's used is when some end user that thinks they're smarter than they are ends up using it and borking their system and then brings it in to me for repair. Maybe Microsoft is disabling it intentionally? What happens if you try to restore a restore point that was made in a previous build of Windows? I can't imagine that would go over well.
The clean installs I've done in the past week have all had the system protection switched off.
System restore can also be it own worst enemy. I've seen more than a few cases where - as an example - a new software title has been installed. A day or two later client gets some weird hiccough, forces a shutdown, computer restarts but (automatically?) chooses a "last known good restore point."Yes.
Every machine that leaves here has Windows System Protection enabled and configured to use an appropriate amount of storage, and with a fresh Restore Point set.
It's nice to be able to roll back whatever silliness happens after it leaves us, and even nicer to be able to point out that we were not responsible for that silliness in the first place. We've only had to do that a handful of times but the satisfaction is enormous.
Cant say that I have that issue. Why? Because of the 8 computers I have on my bench right now, 8 of 8 wont even boot to the desktop after the 1803 update. They were brought to me that way. Boy this is going to be fun - but hey, job security right?