Its solution is to use Known Issue Rollback, "a new capability that can quickly return an impacted device back to productive use if an issue arises during a Windows update." Basically, over the course of today Windows 10 should undo the problematic change automatically.
That's not really a fix. At best, it's acknowledgement of a fuckup.
That's not really a fix. At best, it's acknowledgement of a fuckup.
It also means they'll be pushing the update out again soon, and it may or may not break everything a second time.
The Microshaft experience.