- The two latest programs for Windows 11 24h2 cause some users problems
- Allegedly is the hardest hit hardware Intel Core Ultra 9 285K
- Game accidents and slowdowns appear to be exclusive for the latest updates
Some users of Windows 11 24H2 have experienced some problems, including slowdowns and even crashes, with people quick to blame the latest update of the popular operating system.
As stained by Neowin, two of the latest Windows 11 24H2 patches (KB5050094 and KB5051987) have caused crashes and instability problems. Neowin Forum uses KiddingGuy first observed game crashes with the latest update that stops the new builders: new allies in Ubisoft Connect, but others have experienced far worse problems since.
Writing for BornCity, a Windows 11 24H2 user running an Intel Core Ultra 9 285K processor on an ASROCK Z890 Pro Rsburn card, could only get the newly built system to run with an Beta Bios. The lack of launch was attributed to the Intel Microcode update integrated into BIOS, despite the latest version of Windows 11 being installed as normal.
The performance problems did not stop when the new hardware was underway. With Windows 11 24H2, it is claimed that a “new massive performance problem” affected the system as soon as a program was minimized or not head “focus”. It is claimed that applications are “massively melted”, so much so that CPU’s watch speed was even reduced. Screenshots show the differences in exploitation.
It is likely that the most worrying thing about the impact of the last two Windows 11 patches is the fact that this user was able to repeat the problems with different applications. These include 7zip and Prime95, proving that it does not appear to be tied to any specific program of incompatibility or stability problems with either KB5050094 or KB5051987.
The user claims that the performance in the 7zips Benchmark was effectively halved when minimizing the program, and that distribution of workload across all available cores (as Intel Core Ultra 9 285K has 24 in total), did not relieve the problem. No solid solution has yet been implemented, except for a solution to force the maximum energy-saving plan to push “full CPU performance” into the background processes, which is far from ideal to long-term use.
Interestingly, it is claimed that the same problems did not occur with the AMD Ryzen 9 9950X processor, as it did with Intel Core Ultra 9 285K, nor with the older Intel Core i9-12900K. Because of this, it is possible that the majority of serious problems can be specific to Intel’s latest LGA 1851 platform, but this does not appear to be as widespread as the software that goes down and incompatibility that has been seen so far.
To check your Processor’s compatibility with Windows 11 24H2, read through Microsoft’s official supported processor list sketching AMD, Intel and Qualcomm CPUs that are confirmed to run without any problems. If you experience slowdown or crash, it may be time to return to an earlier version of the operating system until things start stabilizing.
The problems with Windows 11 continue
Recently, it seems that there has been no lack of problems with Windows 11, where the 24h2 version of the operating system has a few excellent problems. In addition to the recently reported crash and slowdown, this variant of us included more advertising in the Settings menu, high CPU utilization from Task Manager and consistent reminders of backing up things.
Another weird Windows 11 24h2 Bug even contained half of the interface shown in one language, with the latter half mixed in another. This error was apparently tied to a defective installation where two language settings were layered on each other, something that was previously unheard of until last month.
Of course, artificial slowdown and software crashes are more serious than advertising, throttling and language errors, but it culminates with a user experience that has been less than ideal since the latest version is rolled out on October 1, 2024.