There is no perfect software program. All software will inevitably have various bugs. Once a bug occurs, it is like a hole in the clothes. At this time, we need to patch the software. However, patching is also a science. Get rid of the three major misunderstandings about patching and put a "golden bell" on your computer.
Myth 1: The more patches you apply, the better
Many people believe that the more patches you patch your computer, the safer it will be, but this is not the case. Since users' computer environments vary widely, blindly installing inappropriate or wrong patches will not only waste system resources, but may also cause the computer to have a blue screen or even crash. Therefore, patching is actually a skillful job, not a laborious job. Using a good third-party patching software to intelligently and accurately find the patches that need to be applied can help you get twice the result with half the effort.
Myth 2: Microsoft Windows Update patches are the most authoritative
If you are not using a genuine Windows operating system, you should pay special attention to patch screening. Since such operating system files have been modified by third parties, when installing official Microsoft patches downloaded from Windows Update, the installation may fail at first, or may cause system failures at worst, such as a blue screen, continuous restarts, or inability to enter the computer. "Safe mode" and other phenomena. At this time, localized third-party patching software is more reliable.
Misunderstanding 3: Installing patches can only succeed, not fail.
In fact, there are many possibilities for failure to install a patch: the patch is not suitable for your operating system environment. For example, Windows XP patches cannot be installed on Windows 7 systems; the patch is not suitable for the current software environment. If you do not install and use a Microsoft For software (system components), the corresponding patches cannot be applied; some patches will fail to be installed repeatedly on non-genuine systems. This is because the files of such operating systems have been modified by third parties, so Microsoft official patches will Invalid. For these invalid patches, installation failure is really a good thing, so there is no need to be nervous. If you are still worried, then take a "quick-act reassurance" - find a third-party patching software that can accurately identify invalid patches and block them. It also saves resources and time, killing two birds with one stone.