Many Windows 10 Users Unable To Connect To Windows Update Service (bleepingcomputer.com)
For the past two days, some Windows 10 users from around the world have been reporting that they are unable to connect to Windows Update. When they attempt to do so, Windows 10 will complain that they are unable to connect to the update service. From a report: We first learned about this problem yesterday when our member Opera contacted us stating that they, and many others, were having issues connecting to Windows Update. When they tried updating, Windows would report that it could not connect to the update service. The wording of the error, shown below, indicates that this is an Internet connectivity issue, but others are not so sure. "We couldn't connect to the update service. We'll try again later, or you can check now. If it still doesn't work, make sure you're connected to the Internet" Unfortunately, there is no clear cut answer as to what is causing this issue and some feel it is related to a botched Windows Defender update and others state that this could be a DNS issue.
Hopefully they won't fix this, sounds like a god-send.
They win!
The Windows telemetry on the other hand probably has no trouble connecting whatsoever.
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
Unfortunately, mine is still receiving updates.
Windows 10 must be more than halfway through driving consumers onto a much faster student-oriented platform (ChromeOS), a superior OS (Linux Mint, etc), or a competitor (Mac)S). I can't believe how shitty the OS service has been, and how often the cloud "breaks", under Satya's "leadership".
Agree, and it's not just the error messages. Ask tech support for help, and it's the same lameness. Go to an MS support forum, and their "experts" know less than a third grader, just enough to read the scripts.
MS has never bothered to provide meaningful support for its users. Remember, you are a user, not a customer. The customers are the hardware OEM's who buy Windows to put on the machines, not you the end user who paid money to the OEM but not to MS, so why should MS care.
The disturbing thing is to think that those inept user interactions might reflect how things work in general throughout the organization.