![]() I've found the only real way to control this is to turn off all automatically installed Windows Updates in gpedit, and opt to manually install all of them, which creates further problems caused by not having current updates (security holes, bugs, performance fixes, etc.). I'm not sure if major Windows updates remove or reset the gpedit changes back to default, or if something else is happening. Kingfish's suggestion works for the most part, but I've still experienced Windows Update installing AMD graphics drivers anyway, even with the gpedit modifications above. This fix is only temporary because the next time a new AMD driver update shows up in Windows Update, Windows will install away as it did before. In order to manually update your driver, follow the steps below (the next steps): 1. If you neglect to do this, chances are Windows will simply reinstall the drivers right over the ones you had just installed, putting you back at square one, with incorrect drivers. OS - Windows 10 v2004 Graphics driver - Adrenalin 20.9. ![]() ![]() You must do this immediately AFTER you uninstall the Windows-update-installed drivers. Sapphire AMD/ATI Dual-X R9 270X (4GB) graphics card Corsair 600W PSU Samsung 860 EVO 500 GB SATA SSD 1TB 7200 RPM internal HDD Paired with a 32' LCD TV as a monitor connected via HDMI. Search for wushowhide.diagcab on the interwebs and download it - you can use this utility to find the AMD driver update and remove ("hide") it from Windows update. Then of course you're stuck redoing configuration, overclocking, custom fan settings, and everything else within the AMD Radeon desktop app in Windows afterward. This happens to me quite regularly, and it's especially annoying because I have to completely uninstall whatever drivers Windows 11 installs using DDU, which requires a reboot into SAFE mode.
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