ASUS Snapdragon Shows Odd Boot Anomaly

Here is a puzzle that took me longer than I care to admit to fully unpack. I built a recovery USB — clean DISM export, proper bootloader, everything by the book — set it first in the UEFI boot order, and rebooted an ASUS A14 Zenbook expecting to land in a familiar Windows Recovery Environment. Instead, I got the ASUS recovery stub. Every single time. I moved the USB higher in the boot order. I tried the firmware boot menu. I watched the machine apparently select the USB and then, silently and without apology, drop me into ASUS’s own mini-recovery UI anyway. The drive was not defective. The boot order was correct. The machine just did not care. This is my reason for saying: ASUS Snapdragon shows odd boot anomaly.

Getting Past ASUS Snapdragon Shows Odd Boot Anomaly

What I kept landing in was not Microsoft’s WinRE. It was ASUS’s recovery stub from firmware. It’s a minimal launcher, typically just a few hundred megabytes, that presents three or four tiles: Reset this PC, ASUS Recovery, and Advanced options. It looks vaguely like WinRE. It shares some ancestry with winre.wim. But it is ASUS’s gatekeeper, not Microsoft’s recovery environment, and it exists specifically to intercept the boot process before you can get anywhere else.

Here is the mechanism. ASUS, like most Tier-1 OEMs, configures its UEFI firmware with a hardcoded recovery boot path that fires during the BDS (Boot Device Selection) phase. It hits before the standard UEFI boot manager even looks at the user’s boot order. The firmware scans the internal NVMe for a partition stamped with a specific GPT partition type GUID — not the ordinary Microsoft Basic Data GUID, but a dedicated Recovery GUID or a custom OEM namespace. When it finds that partition, it hands control to the stub immediately. Your carefully ordered boot menu is consulted afterward, if at all. The USB was never really in the running.

Secure Boot adds a second layer of obstruction. Let’s say your hand-built USB carries an unsigned or self-signed bootloader (common with DISM-assembled media not signed against Microsoft’s KEK). Then,  the firmware rejects it silently and falls through to the next trusted entry in its internal list. That entry is the ASUS stub. So even when the BDS phase does get as far as examining external media, an unsigned USB is invisible. The machine looks like it’s ignoring you. It is, technically, but for a specific cryptographic reason (yes, really).

The WIM Recompression Tax

Once you understand why your DIY USB is being locked out, it helps to understand what the OEM actually ships in its place. It also explains why making a genuine ASUS recovery drive takes the better part of an hour. It starts with WIM compression. Microsoft’s stock winre.wim uses LZX compression and typically lands somewhere between 500 MB and 1 GB on disk. Manageable. Sensible. But ASUS’s customised image, once you add the recovery launcher, platform drivers, UI payloads, and potentially a full factory image, can balloon to several gigabytes of uncompressed data before anyone has touched the compression knob.

When you kick off the “Create ASUS Recovery Drive” process in MyASUS, what actually happens under the hood is a DISM /Export-Image /Compress:max operation (or its functional equivalent)  applied to an enormous source WIM. Maximum LZX compression, and on newer builds you may even see solid-block LZMS compression, which squeezes harder but runs even slower.

Here’s the critical detail: WIM compression in DISM is largely single-threaded. It reads every file, applies the compression algorithm, writes the output, and verifies integrity as it goes, all on one logical core (yes, really). On an otherwise fast NVMe-equipped laptop, that process still takes 40 to 55 minutes, not because the machine is slow, but because the algorithm is doing an enormous amount of intense, serialised work. The hardware isn’t at fault; the workload is.

Getting to USB-Based (Alternate) Boot

Here’s where the rubber meets the road. Getting external media to boot on an ASUS machine requires working around the firmware, not just the boot order. There are two reliable paths. First: disable Secure Boot in UEFI setup (DEL at POST, not F8 — more on that distinction in a moment). With Secure Boot off, unsigned bootloaders no longer get silently rejected. Second: on older platforms with CSM support, enabling CSM forces a legacy BIOS boot path that bypasses the UEFI BDS handoff to the stub.

The Bottom Line: Build Custom Recovery Media

Whether you use the MS supplied “Create a recovery drive” facility, or turn to the MyASUS toolbox to do likewise, the best way to protect an ASUS Zenbook A14 is to build recovery media from that PC. As I learned through a series of failed recovery attempts with other, supposedly generic, all-purpose recovery media, that stuff doesn’t fly inside the Zenbook’s firmware envelope.

Learn from my mistake, and follow this advice as soon as  you can. Otherwise, you too, will fumble around until you find the MyASUS in WinRE tool that does cloud-based image reconstruction instead. If all you want is WinRE running a command prompt, that’s not a good alternative. Do it now: don’t delay!

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Intel DSA Remains Driver Install Clickmeister

I just realized that DSA was MIA on my ThinkPad X12 Gen 1 Detachable Tablet. So I installed it, then ran it. It found 3 drivers in need of updates on that device: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and (Xe) Graphics. In updating them, I observed that the  Intel Driver and Support Assistant (Intel DSA) remains driver install clickmeister supreme. Let me explain…

Why say: Intel DSA Remains Driver Install Clickmeister?

It’s long been my observation that using DSA requires lots of mouse clicks. This time around, installing the three drivers shown in the lead-in screencap required at least 24 mouse clicks. For the record, those drivers were (numbers at right count clicks for each one):

  • Wireless Bluetooth Drivers (9)
  • 11th-14th Gen Processor Graphics (10)
  • Wi-Fi Drivers (5)

This time around it actually took me 4 additional mouse clicks to get from item 2 to item 3, because I was installing the GPU driver for the first time. Thus, I had to reboot my system, because DSA got “stuck” on “installing” for item 2, and wouldn’t advance to item 3. Sigh. I didn’t count those “extra” clicks in my reported total.

Achieving Intel Driver Update Silence

Believe it or not, that’s the title of a blog I posted on April 27, 2023. That was another time when the sheer number of clicks involved in running DSA hit me hard. It remains noticeable. Today, it struck me as excessive. So I’m formulating this plea to the Intel DSA developers:

Please add a silent mode switch to DSA. Let users tell the tool to run the installs without requiring minutes of babysitting to get through routine maintenance.

I wonder if anybody is listening. Then, I wonder if they’ll respond. Here in Windows-World the silence can sometimes be deafening. Let’s see what happens, shall we?

 

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Troubleshooting Flo6 S3 Sleep Oddities

Now that I’m back to a normal work pattern, I couldn’t help but notice that the power button on my Flo6/MSI B550 Tomahawk PC was blinking this morning. That means it’s sleeping and needs a touch to wake itself back  up. Indeed, that blinking power button is the unmistakable signature of S3 sleep — Suspend to RAM — where the system cuts power to everything except memory. Nobody asked it to do that. Time to find out why it thought that was a good idea. Hence, I found myself troubleshooting Flo6 S3 sleep oddities.

Troubleshooting Flo6 S3 Sleep Oddities: Step 1

My first move with any uninvited sleep behavior is to open an elevated command prompt and run powercfg /a. This dumps a plain-English summary of every sleep state the OS currently considers available — and, crucially, tells you which ones are actually enabled. The lead-in graphic shows what Flo6 reported.

That told me everything I needed to know at a glance. S3 was alive and well. Hibernate was also active. Windows had a full menu of power-down options available to it, and apparently it was helping itself. The next question was: what power plan setting was pulling the trigger?

Step 2: Drilling deeper

To see exactly what the current power scheme was telling Windows to do with sleep, I queried the sleep sub-group directly with powercfg /query SCHEME_CURRENT SUB_SLEEP. The output is verbose, so here’s the relevant section I was hunting for:

0x00004650 is 18,000 decimal — 5 hours on AC power. So Windows was faithfully sleeping Flo6 after 5 hours of perceived inactivity, exactly as I’d told it to in recovering from a recent, ill-advised troubleshooting test that reset all my sleep options. Nothing malicious, nothing mysterious. Just a setting I’d explicitly configured sitting where I’d put it, also wrong. Time to kill it.

Pulling the Plug on the Sleep/Wake Timers

I wanted three things gone: the Sleep After timer, Hybrid Sleep, and Wake Timers. Setting any timeout value to 0 disables it. I ran the following commands, covering both AC and DC (battery) power states for completeness, even though Flo6 is a desktop that will never run on battery:

As a belt-and-suspenders measure, I also went into Device Manager, expanded the Universal Serial Bus controllers node, and for each USB Root Hub, opened Properties > Power Management and unchecked Allow the computer to turn off this device to save power. USB Selective Suspend has a well-documented history of nudging systems toward sleep states in ways that aren’t immediately obvious from power plan settings alone. Worth the two minutes it takes to disable it across the board.

The EC Reset: Clearing the Firmware’s Memory

OS-level changes are necessary, but they don’t always flush stale power-state data that’s been cached at the firmware level. The MAG B550 Tomahawk MAX has an Embedded Controller that can hold onto a previous power state even after you’ve changed every relevant Windows setting. The fix is straightforward: shut Flo6 down cleanly, flip the PSU switch off, unplug the AC cord, then hold the case power button for 15 to 30 seconds. This drains the residual charge and forces the EC to reinitialize from scratch. Reconnect everything, power on, and let the board POST fresh. It’s a small step, but it closes a gap that software alone can’t address.

Verdict: Flo6 Should Stay Awake

Hopefully, Flo6 makes it through the night — and several nights after that — without a single uninvited nap. No blinking power button at 6 AM, no dead monitors, no manual wake required. For extra confidence, I’ve got a scheduled Task Scheduler job logging system uptime to a text file every hour overnight. If S3 ever comes back uninvited, I’ll have a timestamp trail to work from. IMO, one week’s worth of clean logs is good enough for me to call this one closed.

If I’ve missed anything, the blinking power button will be back. I hope not, but here in Windows-World anything is possible. If it’s not “case closed” I’ll report back with an addendum here. Fingers crossed that won’t be needed…

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Resuming Work After Week-long Absence

OK, then. We dropped onto the runway about 20 minutes early last evening. Wife Dina and I returned from a trip to Boston, to watch son Gregory trot across the stage at Emerson College’s Wang Theater to pick up his diploma and graduate. It was quite a trip in many ways. This morning, I’m back at my desk, resuming work after week-long absence. So far, it’s mostly two things: catch-up and clean-up. Let me explain…

What’s Involved: Resuming Work After Week-long Absence

Here’s the drill:
1. run winget upgrade –all — include-unknown to catch all pending updates that winget can handle (7 items)
2. run PatchMyPC Home Updater to catch other stuff that WinGet doesn’t (Revo Uninstaller, in this particular case)
3. run PC Manager deep cleanup (3.2GB found/1.1 GB cleaned) and unCleaner (2.5 GB found, 2.1 GB cleaned)
4. Because today is Patch Tuesday for May 2026, I also applied all pending monthly updates (2 for Defender, 1 for .NET Framework, and the usual monthly MSRT).

All that stuff is pretty easy and straightforward. I did have to reboot, though, because updates via WinGet and PatchMyPC didn’t proceed properly. Something apparently gummed up my runtime. Fixed with the tried-and-true strategy of “Try a reboot, if Windows is balky.” Add a second restart after the Patch Tuesday updates completed, just for grins.

Now, the Real Work Begins…

Next I have to plow through about a thousand email messages that piled up while were off having fun and making family history. That will probably take me the rest of the day. Then I can start updating the rest of the fleet. Wish me luck!

To cap things off, here’s a photo of Gregory proudly presenting his diploma amidst absolute chaos on Boston Common (across the street from Emerson College) after the ceremony ended. Cheers to him, and all of us!

 

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Troubleshooter Test Wrecks Sleep/Wake Settings

I have to laugh. I was poking around yesterday trying to see if MS had updated the old Microsoft Support Diagnostic Tool for power options. It hasn’t so I accidentally fired off the old tool and let it run. Upon completion it told me it had “fixed” some things. This morning my experiment bit me on the hindquarters. Instead of starting up after a keyboard press or mouse click, I got …. nothing. I had to press the Power Button to wake up the system, after which all worked as expected. Alas, my troubleshooter test wrecks sleep/wake settings, and I had to go into Power Options to make things right again. Sigh.

Why Say: Troubleshooter Test Wrecks Sleep/Wake Settings?

What the troubleshooter “fixed” flew in the face of how I wanted my system to behave. When I asked Copilot what happened, it explained it as a kind of “own goal” resulting from running the tool. Its explanation is illuminating and a little humiliating for yours truly:

…the troubleshooter on its way out the door silently overrode a deliberate user setting, caused a real problem, and left no log entry explaining what it changed. That’s a tidy illustration of why automated “fixers” that don’t disclose what they’re changing are a liability.

True enough. Fixing the problem took only a few seconds:

1. Select Power Options from Control Panel
2. Click “Change advanced power settings”
3. Navigate to “USB Settings,” then “USB selective suspend setting”
4. Change both “On battery” and “Plugged in” from “Enabled” to “Disabled”

This keeps mouse and keyboard awake so either can wake the PC when it does something. That’s what I want. That’s what I got. And alas, that’s what the troubleshoot undid for me when it ran yesterday. It wanted to save power and that’s what selective suspend does.

Here in Windows-World there’s enough going on that I don’t need to create problems for myself. But that doesn’t stop me from doing it occasionally anyway. But now it’s fixed and I’m aware that I shouldn’t run msdt.exe unless I really need it. My exploration/experiment reminded me that some investigations require cleanup. Sigh again.

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Windows Defender May Delete PowerShell Scripts…and More!

Here’s a fun way to start a Monday: you fire up a PowerShell script you’ve run many times — maybe it provisions a batch of AD accounts, maybe it sweeps stale GPOs — and it simply vanishes. No error dialog. No event log entry. Quarantine warnings not provided, either. The file is just gone, like it offended someone. Which, as it turns out, it did.

The culprit? Recent changes to Microsoft Defender’s Attack Surface Reduction (ASR) rules — specifically, tightened enforcement arrived with Windows 11 23H2. And it has only grown more aggressive in 24H2/25H2. If you manage Windows endpoints for a living, this one deserves some notice.

How and Why Windows Defender May Delete PowerShell Scripts

Microsoft has been steadily ratcheting up ASR rules over the past couple of years. Two rules in particular have become dramatically more assertive: “Block execution of potentially obfuscated scripts” and the newer “Block execution from known script interpreter paths” (rule GUID 9e6c4e5a-1037-4377-92f4-2db0f7e629e7). The latter now matches elevated execution paths that have nothing to do with user shell startup, which means your perfectly legitimate admin scripts can get caught in this net.

Here’s the insidious part. Starting with the 23H2 and 24H2 Defender sensor updates, script-blocking ASR rules are now enforced at the kernel driver layer (via WdFilter.sys, Defender’s minifilter drive) — before process creation even occurs. That means scripts launched via WMI, COM+, or scheduled tasks can be silently killed or quarantined without generating an event log entry. You get no breadcrumbs. The script just doesn’t run, and the script file itself may disappear.

This has caused a wave of false positives hitting legitimate PowerShell scripts, SCOM monitoring agents, Active Directory management tools, and enterprise deployment scripts. If you experienced déjà vu reading that, you’re not wrong. In January 2023, a faulty Defender signature update (builds 1.381.2134.0 through 1.381.2163.0) caused the “Block Win32 API calls from Office macro” ASR rule to go haywire and mass-delete Start menu and taskbar shortcuts across enterprises. Microsoft had to ship a dedicated recovery script (AddShortcuts.ps1) and a taskbar repair utility to clean up the mess. Consider this the sequel — quieter but just as disruptive.

How to Recover Deleted or Quarantined Files

If Defender has eaten your scripts, don’t panic. Work through these steps in order:

  1. Check Defender’s quarantine via the GUI. Open Windows Security → Virus & threat protection → Protection history. Filter by “Quarantined Items.” If your script is there, select it and choose Restore.
  2. Browse the quarantine folder directly. Quarantined files live in C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows Defender\Quarantine. They’re encrypted, but they show that Defender took them.
  3. Use PowerShell for deeper inspection. Run Get-MpThreatDetection and Get-MpThreat to list recent detections and see exactly which ASR rule fired. To restore from the command line, use MpCmdRun.exe -Restore -ListAll followed by MpCmdRun.exe -Restore -Name <ThreatName>.
  4. Add targeted exclusions. Use Add-MpPreference -ExclusionPath “C:\Scripts” or configure per-rule exclusions via Intune or Group Policy to prevent recurrence.
  5. Restore from backup. If the file is gone from quarantine entirely, fall back to File History, system restore points, or your backup solution of choice.
  6. For enterprise environments: check the Microsoft 365 Defender portal’s quarantine and Action Center — detections from managed endpoints often surface there even when local logs stay silent.

That leads to what I’ll call a “Pro tip” for admins to consider. Before enabling any new or aggressive ASR rule, set it to Audit mode first (value 2) rather than Block mode (value 1). Audit mode logs what would be blocked without actually deleting anything. Run it for a week or two, review the results in Event Viewer under Microsoft → Windows → Windows Defender → Operational (Event IDs 1121 and 1122), and then flip to Block. This single practice would have prevented most of the heartburn described above.

You Win Some, You Lose Some…

Let me be clear: Defender’s tighter ASR rules are genuinely good for security. Blocking script execution at the kernel level before a process even spawns is a meaningful defense against fileless malware and living-off-the-land attacks. But Microsoft badly needs to improve logging transparency when scripts get blocked at the kernel driver layer. Silent enforcement with no audit trail isn’t “defense in depth” — it’s “debugging in the dark.”

Until that gets fixed, the playbook is straightforward: keep good backups, audit before you block,  and test ASR changes in a staging ring before pushing to production. Remember: your antimalware solution is only as smart as its latest signature update. As the January 2023 shortcut debacle proved, even Microsoft’s own rules can bite the hand that feeds them. I think these just bit me. Don’t let it happen to you!

But Wait! There’s More…

In my usual ElevenForum readover this weekend, I stumbled on a thread that mentioned scripts — and an encrypted password file — disappearing from the poster’s Windows 11 PC. As I responded to that thread “This is deeply disturbing.” It just doesn’t seem right that Defender can cause scripts (and more) to vanish via rule enforcement. You need to steer around this pothole until it gets filled. Not an unfamiliar strategy, alas, here in Windows-World.

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Revo Roots Out Relics

I’ve been meaning to do this for a while. But this morning, I found the fabled “round tuit” for an app clean-up on Flo6 using Revo Uninstaller. Using that tool, I reduced my count of installed apps from 95 to 83, eliminating an even dozen items. When I claim that “Revo roots out relics,” I’m claiming that the program helps stamp out no-longer-needed (or relevant) apps quickly and easily. Let me offer some details, and an explanation…

How Revo Roots Out Relics…

The intro screencap shows a partial list of all apps installed on Flo6. When I started this clean-up adventure, I was mostly beset with two sets of relics:

  • Leftovers from the ASRock B550 Extreme4 motherboard, which I replaced with an MSI MAG Tomahawk B500 MAX in January (3/12)
  • Leftovers from the Creative Sound Blaster AE-7 I installed earlier this month, but couldn’t get to working (5/12)

The other items were a hodge-podge of odds’n’ends including:

  • AIDA64, yet another system information tool that I don’t even remember installing, and never use
  • Angry IP Scanner: an alternative to Advanced IP Scanner that I tried a few times, before switching back to Advanced…
  • CPU-ID: I don’t need the plain-vanilla one any more, because MSI provides a customized version for the MSI MAG Tomahawk
  • CrystalDiskMark 8.4.0 still installed on Flo6, even though I’m running version 9.0.2. Removed it.

That’s it. Subsequent disk cleanup on Flo6 recovered 6 GB of disk space, too.

App Cleanups Should Happen Periodically

I consider this sort of review and removal part of a good Windows PC hygiene regime. Today was my day to clean up old apps. I’m glad I did. I’ll probably do it again at summer’s end, as I tend to pick up detritus like this over time. Here in Windows-World, if you don’t need it, or can’t use it, why keep it? Out it goes!

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Canary Jump Sows Predictable Chaos

After recently clean installing the 2021-vintage Lenovo ThinkPad X12 Detachable Tablet Gen 1 I decided to leave it running a production build.  That means I needed a new Canary channel test machine. So this morning, I upgraded the 2025-vintage ThinkPad P16 Gen 3 to that Insider Preview level. Unsurprisingly, this “Canary jump” sows predictable chaos. Let me tell you what happened, and what I did to recover…

Why Say: Canary Jump Sows Predictable Chaos?

No sooner did I reboot into Canary Build 26300.8246 than did all hell start breaking loose. As is my usual practice, I remoted into that PC from my Flo6 desktop — but not for long. In under less than a minute the PC crashed, and threw a slew of interesting “Critical events” as it went down. You can see them depicted in the lead-in screencap.

Of the 6 items in that list, numbers two through five are relevant. That’s because all cluster in the same minute (11:02 AM) and all are related to my remote session failing, then Windows crashing. The X-Rite Color event simply reflects the program’s unhappiness with running in a remote session (it appears again as item 6, when I start my next remote session).

The others are worth visiting in a little more detail:
• Windows stopped working comes from a bugcheck. Copilot tells me this is most likely owing to firmware or driver issues between the laptop and this bleeding edge release
• This provoked the “not properly shut down” as Windows crashed
• It culminates in the “shut down unexpectedly” as Windows turned itself off
At the start of this sequence an illegal memory reference kicked things off. This is why firmware and drivers are suspects: they’re the most likely perpetrators of such untoward acts.

Chaos Cleanup on Aisle 7!

I now understand my cleanup, had it been performed before upgrading to Canary, might have prevented the crash that occurred. I visited Lenovo Vantage, found a new UEFI update, and installed it. I ran Intel DSA, found four new drivers, and installed them. I ran the NVIDIA app, found new driver version 596.36, and installed it, too.

Now the P16G3 laptop seems to be purring right along. I’ll take it as a lesson learned (and probably re-learned) that it’s a good idea to update firmware and drivers before making major OS changes. Now that I actually stop to THINK about it, that makes pretty good sense. Even in Windows-World, it’s better to plan and aim before firing…

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Timing WinGet’s Update Pipeline

OK then, I just read at WinAero that a new PowerToys v0.99.0 is out. Checking via WinGet upgrade in PowerShell it’s not yet in the pipeline. Nevertheless, the app itself is happy to grab said update from its GitHub repository, as you can see in the lead-in graphic. I’m now conducting an experiment. I’ll be checking hourly as I work at my desk, to see when that new PowerToys version comes into WinGet’s ken. Should be interesting…

What’s Involved in Timing WinGet’s Update Pipeline?

Behind the scenes, lots of things must happen before WinGet catches up, and offers the PowerToys update:
1. MS publishes the new release on GitHub (that’s done)
2. A Pull Request (PR) is sent to winget-pkgs with info about the new version, URLs, hash values, and so forth (usually automated)
3. Pull Request validation runs: automated checks verify installer hashes, check URL resolution, and validate manifest schema
4. Pull request merges into the WinGet source: a maintainer approves the package and merges it into the public database
5. WinGet CDN propagates: the updated database index appears via the winget source in related commands (show, install, uninstall, etc.)

How Long Does It Take?

Because PowerToys comes from Microsoft, its timeline is about as short as such things get. Turnaround normally takes no less than 12 hours, nor more than 48 depending on timing. If a weekend gets in the way the delay can stretch out. Ditto if issues with the manifest show themselves, or if the software being packaged shows a bug. Thus, for example, PowerToys v.0.99 has a Command Palette crash bug, and may be slowed to accommodate suitable hotfix.

We’ll see how this one goes. There’s already a new V0.99.1 version on GitHub (which includes that very hotfix). It’s in the WinGet pipeline now: let’s see how long it takes to get through, shall we?

Note Added 1:05 Later…It’s HERE!

The original post went up at 1:05PM local time. It’s now 2:10PM and a check on the P16 Gen 1 Mobile Workstation produces the following WinGet output: It’s here…

Notice that version 0.99.1 is on offer. That means the PowerToys team got its hotfixes into the package before sending it off to WinGet. Good job, @ClintRutkas and team. I am impressed.

And, now that I’m running it on the suitably-configured X380 Yoga, I see that the PowerToys upgrade also flashes an icon. Impressed again:

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Firefox Update Fixes Weird Cursor Ripple

I’ve got to admit, I was misled this morning. After updating my NVIDIA Studio driver for the 3070Ti GPU, I noticed a strange “ripple” behavior around the on-screen cursor in Firefox. This occurred as I was scrolling inside today’s new posts and threads at ElevenForum.com. After reloading the graphics driver (WinKey+Shift+Ctrl+B), no change. So I asked Copilot: “Do I need to reboot?” “Nope,” it responded, “a Firefox update fixes weird cursor ripple” thanks to a fix for a DirectComposition code path error when using NVIDIA cards. It worked!

How Firefox Update Fixes Weird Cursor Ripple

A well-advised principle in troubleshooting relies on answering the question “What changed?” That’s what had me ready to blame the new NVIDIA driver as soon as Firefox got wonky. After taking advice from Copilot, I noticed further that the cursor ripple was indeed limited only to Firefox. It didn’t show up in Chrome or Edge, nor in other Windows apps. If it had been the GPU driver, all would have been affected.

Thus, I’m glad I thought to ask Copilot rather than start rebooting or rolling back the driver. Turns out the cause was obvious, indeed, but related to the specific program I was running as it interacted with the NVIDIA driver. Here in Windows-World, it’s wise not to overlook the obvious. But it’s also wise to cast a wider net, so as not to blame the obvious when something else could be — and in this particular case, was — at fault.

All’s well that ends well. I’m happily using my updated system. And Firefox — where I usually work to create this WordPress content — is working correctly now, too. Bonus: updating the browser is much faster than a driver rollback, and faster than a reboot. Good-oh!

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