Microsoft pushes Windows 10 20H2 version to more users
Previously, due to compatibility issues, Microsoft has gradually suspended the push of the Windows 10 20H2 version, and Microsoft expressed that it hopes to collect more information to ensure version stability.
So up to now, there are actually quite a few users who have not received the new version. Of course, this is not a bad thing. After all, stability is the most important thing for users.
During this time, Microsoft has resolved two compatibility issues that prevented users from upgrading, including crashes caused by the Thunderbolt interface and audio driver issues. When users use this interface to connect to an external NVMe SSD, they will immediately have a blue screen of death.
Obviously, this situation is not suitable for pushing the faulty version to users, so Microsoft uses the back-end server to prevent devices with Thunderbolt interfaces from upgrading to the new version.
Microsoft has previously released the update log of this cumulative update preview, but Microsoft did not mention this aspect in the update log.
However, Microsoft issued a separate support announcement indicating that it has fixed the blue screen of death problem, which is mainly caused by the incompatibility of some old drivers.
The affected operating systems are mainly Windows 10 20H1 and Windows 10 20H2. Other versions lower than 20H1 are not affected by this issue.
Some brands of audio devices are also affected by compatibility failures. These audio devices may have completely unusable drivers after upgrading to a new version.
Affected audio equipment includes Conexant, etc. If you were prompted that audio-related issues were blocked when you tried to upgrade, you can try again now.