PCWorld (USA)

Wallpaper bug from Windows 7’s ‘final’ update will get fixed

Dead OS walking.

- BY BRAD CHACOS

Windows 7 may have gone end-of-life recently, but Microsoft’s preparing a postmortem patch to fix a bug introduced in what was supposed to be the final update.

After installing the KB4534310 update ( go.pcworld.com/kb45) on Patch Tuesday, many users complained that their wallpaper turned black. While some forum-goers were quick to grab their torches and pitchforks, convinced it was a last second-middle finger to lingering Windows 7 users, that’s not the case whatsoever. It’s a bug, and Microsoft’s readying a fix for it despite Windows 7 being out of support.

“We are working on a resolution and will provide an update in an upcoming release,

which will be released to all customers running Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1,” the update’s support page now says. At first, Microsoft only promised a fix for organizati­ons paying for Extended Security Updates, as the Verge ( go.pcworld. com/frw7) noted, but a change of heart’s occurred and now everybody’s getting it. Good.

In the meantime, the black screens happen when you set your wallpaper to Stretch. Using another configurat­ion option when you’re setting your wallpaper works around the issue—center or selecting a custom-sized image matched to your screen resolution are probably the best Stretch alternativ­es, but Fill, Fit, and Tile work too. Once you’ve switched away from a stretched wallpaper, your imagery should return.

Better yet, you could move to a stillsuppo­rted operating system at no cost, as Microsoft’s free Windows 10 upgrade ( go. pcworld.com/f10u) is still officially-unofficial­ly available. Staying on an operating system that isn’t receiving security patches is a bad idea. But if you’re dead-set on sticking with an end-of-life OS, be sure to grab a security suite ( go.pcworld.com/scsu) and read our guide to staying safe on Windows 7 after the security patches stop ( go. pcworld.com/scpt). It’ll keep you as protected as possible.

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 ??  ?? Microsoft’s free Windows 10 upgrade is still officially-unofficial­ly available.
Microsoft’s free Windows 10 upgrade is still officially-unofficial­ly available.

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