Working on a pretty new prebuilt HP desktop TP01-2234 running windows 11 24H2. There is a certain windows update that it will not install. It is the 2025-03 cumulative update KB5053598. So far this is the only one not installing. It downloads it, then starts to install it. It will stop several seconds at 55% then jump to 100% but will say retry. Once it fails, it gives an error saying install error 0x800f0983. Also the windows update icon in taskbar is red because of this.
Have tried running the windows update automated diagnostic, it said it detected a problem and tried to resolve it. Tried updating again and same thing happens. It asked me if that solved the problem and answered no. It then asks me to run the windows update error check diagnostic which I did. It said unable to resolve windows update errors. That led me to it asking to collect data through the feedback hub. I will do that.
Would doing a windows repair help with this? Ran sfc /scannow and it found corrupt files and successfully repaired them. Did not help.
Have a family member who has a mini pc running windows 11, not sure which version at the moment and he has several updates that are doing the same thing. Hoping if I get this figured out, maybe I can do the same thing to his.
Have tried running the windows update automated diagnostic, it said it detected a problem and tried to resolve it. Tried updating again and same thing happens. It asked me if that solved the problem and answered no. It then asks me to run the windows update error check diagnostic which I did. It said unable to resolve windows update errors. That led me to it asking to collect data through the feedback hub. I will do that.
Would doing a windows repair help with this? Ran sfc /scannow and it found corrupt files and successfully repaired them. Did not help.
Have a family member who has a mini pc running windows 11, not sure which version at the moment and he has several updates that are doing the same thing. Hoping if I get this figured out, maybe I can do the same thing to his.
Last edited: