No. Supporting the other comments, the most you can do is reschedule them over and over. So you’re wasting time just pushing back the dates but you will forget one day and they’ll happen when you least expect it.
There is no way to turn them off and that is intent by design. Because Microsoft feels that the user needs their hand held anymore in making decisions based on a new computer they spent hundreds of dollars on, on top of whatever licenses they bothered spending more money on just so they can tell you when you will update. There is no choice, no option. You WILL do it and like it. Because Microsoft.
Most of the annoying updates I’ve found have been for .NET. Fuck .NET.
No. Supporting the other comments, the most you can do is reschedule them over and over. So you’re wasting time just pushing back the dates but you will forget one day and they’ll happen when you least expect it.
There is no way to turn them off and that is intent by design. Because Microsoft feels that the user needs their hand held anymore in making decisions based on a new computer they spent hundreds of dollars on, on top of whatever licenses they bothered spending more money on just so they can tell you when you will update. There is no choice, no option. You WILL do it and like it. Because Microsoft.
Most of the annoying updates I’ve found have been for .NET. Fuck .NET.