Yeah, you’re right — the Windows 11 24H2 update has been a bit rocky for some users, especially on systems with older or unsupported drivers. The BSoD and fingerprint sensor issues seem tied to outdated BIOS or Intel/AMD chipset drivers, while the taskbar and clipboard glitches often clear up after a clean reinstall of the update using the Windows 11 Installation Assistant instead of Windows Update. If your system’s running fine now, I’d hold off for a few weeks until Microsoft pushes a cumulative patch that stabilizes things. If you’ve already updated and are facing problems, try running “sfc /scannow” and “DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth”, and make sure your OEM drivers are current — that resolves most post-update quirks. Worst case, you can roll back via Settings > System > Recovery > Go back within 10 days of installing 24H2.
To fix it safely, first boot into Safe Mode (hold Shift while clicking Restart → Troubleshoot → Advanced options → Startup Settings). Then, open Command Prompt and run verifier /reset to disable Driver Verifier. Reboot normally and check Event Viewer or BlueScreenView to see which driver caused the crash. Once identified, update or uninstall that driver from Device Manager or the vendor’s site. If it’s unclear, a clean reinstall of recent drivers (especially GPU or network) usually clears it up.
Hey all,
My OneDrive keeps crashing randomly—sometimes at startup, signing in, or while syncing. I’ve seen error codes like 0x8004def4 and 0x80000003. I’ve tried clearing the Office cache and doing a clean boot, but no luck so far.
Could this be due to incomplete Windows updates, app conflicts, or corrupted OneDrive files? What’s the best way to fix repeated crashes—reset, reinstall, or something else?
Any step-by-step tips would be super helpful!
Thanks!
Hi everyone,
I’ve been experiencing an issue where OneDrive keeps crashing on my Windows PC. It often stops working unexpectedly, which disrupts file syncing and access.
I’ve tried basic troubleshooting like restarting my PC and reinstalling OneDrive, but the problem persists.
Has anyone faced this issue before?
What steps can I take to fix OneDrive from crashing repeatedly on Windows 10/11?
Any guidance or solutions would be greatly appreciated!
Hi everyone,
I recently encountered the “No Such Interface Supported” error on my Windows 10/11 system. It appeared when I tried to open certain applications or files. After some troubleshooting, I was able to fix the issue.
I’m sharing this here in case others run into the same problem — or if anyone has additional insights on why this error occurs and the best ways to prevent it in the future.
Has anyone else faced this issue?
What were your causes or fixes that worked for you?
Whenever I try to safely remove my USB drive or external hard disk, I get the error message:
“Windows can’t stop your Generic Volume Device because a program is still using it.”
I’ve made sure to close all files and programs that might be using the drive, but the message still appears.
Has anyone experienced this issue before? What steps can I take to safely remove the device without risking data loss?
Hi everyone,
After installing the latest Windows 11 update, my PC started crashing with a blue screen and keeps getting stuck in a boot loop. I’ve tried restarting several times, but it still won’t load properly.
Has anyone else faced this issue? What steps can I take to fix the blue screen and stop the boot-loop caused by the Windows 11 update?
Any help or troubleshooting tips would be appreciated!
Hi everyone,
After installing the latest Windows 11 24H2 update, my system started showing Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) errors. It seems to happen mostly during startup or heavy disk activity. I suspect it might be related to my SSD, since others online mentioned similar issues with specific models.
Has anyone else encountered this problem after updating to 24H2?
If so, have you found any workarounds or fixes (like driver updates, firmware patches, or rollback options)?
Any insights would be appreciated!
Hi everyone,
I recently came across multiple reports about the Windows 11 24H2 update causing serious issues for many users — including Blue Screen of Death (BSoD) errors, system slowdowns, fingerprint sensor failures, and network connectivity problems. Some people also mentioned glitches like disappearing taskbars, broken clipboard history, and undeletable cache files after the update.
Microsoft has reportedly paused the rollout for certain devices, but I’m wondering:
Has anyone here personally experienced these issues after updating to Windows 11 24H2?
Were you able to find any workarounds or fixes?
Is it safer to hold off on this update for now, or has anyone found it stable on their system?
Would love to hear your experiences and any advice on how to handle or revert this update safely.
Thanks!
Hi everyone,
I recently encountered a Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) with the stop code Driver Verifier IOManager Violation. I’m not sure what’s causing it or how to fix it. Has anyone experienced this before? What steps can I take to resolve this issue safely?
Thanks in advance for any guidance!
If a project disappears from your NAS, it could be due to accidental deletion, database or index corruption, file system errors, sync conflicts, or RAID/drive problems. To recover it, check the NAS recycle bin or trash and search the drives directly for the project files. Look for backups, snapshots, or previous versions, and check any library or database files the project relies on, since rebuilding them can sometimes restore missing entries. If the files were deleted or corrupted, use recovery tools like Stellar NAS data recovery, ReclaiMe, R-Studio, EaseUS, or UFS Explorer, making sure to recover to a separate drive to avoid overwriting. Going forward, enable snapshots or versioning on shared folders and keep regular external backups, because RAID alone isn’t a backup.
A brief storm caused a power outage that took out my Synology DS224+. Both drives, an 8 TB and a 12 TB Seagate IronWolf, showed up in a docking station, but Windows couldn’t assign drive letters or access the files, which contained Plex media and other important data. The problem turned out to be just the NAS power cable. After replacing it, the NAS powered up normally, and I’m now backing up all the data to an external drive.
On a Synology DS423+, you can’t split a single drive between different RAID types because RAID5 and RAID0 work at the whole-disk level. Each storage pool or volume has to use full drives, so you can’t just carve out part of each 20 TB drive for RAID5 and use the rest for RAID0. To have both a backup area and a fast RAID0 pool for movies, you’ll need to dedicate some drives to RAID5 and others to RAID0, or use a few extra external drives for backups.
On a Synology DS423+, you can’t split a single drive between different RAID types. RAID5 and RAID0 work at the whole-disk level, so each storage pool or volume has to use full drives. You’d need to dedicate entire drives to a RAID5 pool for backups—you can’t just carve out a bit of each 20 TB drive and use the rest for RAID0. If you want both a safe backup area and a fast RAID0 pool for movies, you’ll either have to dedicate some drives to RAID5 and others to RAID0, or grab a couple of extra external drives for backups.
First, check your SSD manufacturer’s site for the latest firmware (Samsung Magician, Crucial Storage Executive, etc.) and install it manually if available. Then, open Device Manager → Storage Controllers and ensure you’re using the latest NVMe controller driver (sometimes rolling back to the Microsoft Standard NVMe driver fixes it). If that doesn’t help, try disabling “Fast Startup” in Power Options and run sfc /scannow and DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth from an elevated Command Prompt. As a last resort, you can roll back to 23H2 until a compatibility patch lands — Microsoft’s already aware and pushing out hotfixes through Windows Update for affected models.