As far as I know Windows 10 doesn't observe 'patch tuesday', it's patch whenever.
Highlights
- Updates to improve security when using Internet Explorer, Microsoft Edge, networking technologies, and input devices such as a mouse, keyboard, or stylus.
- Updates for verifying user names and passwords.
- Updates for storing and managing files.
Improvements and fixes
This security update includes quality improvements. Key changes include:
- Provides protections against a new subclass of speculative execution side-channel vulnerabilities, known as Microarchitectural Data Sampling, for 32-Bit (x86) versions of Windows (CVE-2019-11091, CVE-2018-12126, CVE-2018-12127, CVE-2018-12130). Use the registry settings as described in the Windows Client and Windows Server articles. (These registry settings are enabled by default for Windows Client OS editions and Windows Server OS editions.)
- Addresses an issue that causes high CPU usage from SearchUI.exe for a small number of users. This issue only occurs on devices that have disabled searching the web using Windows Desktop Search.
- Security updates to Microsoft Edge, Internet Explorer, Microsoft Scripting Engine, Windows App Platform and Frameworks, Windows Input and Composition, Windows Media, Windows Fundamentals, Windows Authentication, Windows Cryptography, Windows Datacenter Networking, Windows Storage and Filesystems, Windows Wireless Networking, the Microsoft JET Database Engine, Windows Kernel, Windows Virtualization, and Windows Server.
KB4515384 has been released for 1903 users, which includes Cortana and search fixes:
That might the tip of the iceberg if these highlights are correct:Few reports this morning about one of the patches completely breaking the Start Menu in 1903.
I'm at the point of completely blocking updates for our users because I don't trust MS to get anything right anymore.That might the tip of the iceberg if these highlights are correct:
I'm at the point of completely blocking updates for our users because I don't trust MS to get anything right anymore.
How long will it be before they release an update that completely wrecks computers, takes down multiple businesses and ends up in a mass lawsuit?
Anyone else not getting a menu when they right click on a app icon in the task bar?
Also lost the ability to open the clock / calendar from the taskbar.
Windows 10 must be a nightmare for it's coders. No proper Q&A, Agile, a Behemoth of a platform. Microsoft should rethink how it handles the Updates really fast. The last few years haven't been forgiving for MS semi-recent practices on and for Windows.
Your last two sentences are spot on. And MS wonders why Windows-7 users have little to no incentive to move to WIndows-10. Who can afford the luxury of an OS that often no longer works well after an update? But, then again, that is the price MS chose to pay when the "wizards" (??) decided to try to make Windows-10 a "one size fits all" OS, complete with needless complexity (read, fluff, bloat, unneeded dubious functionality that one cannot choose to not install).
Recent monthly security updates have also broken important things in Windows 7, too. Last month it was VB Scripts / VBA macros.... a couple months before that it was Custom Views in Event Viewer. And there have been multiple problems with updates hosing third-party AV products... this was especially bad in April.
The problem is low patch quality, not Windows 10 in and of itself.