Windows 10 devices get recommended troubleshooting for problems we know about and problems found in diagnostic data sent to Microsoft. We might determine that a problem is impacting a specific set of devices based on Windows version information, user feedback, error information, device settings, hardware configuration, and device capabilities such as installed apps and drivers. We’ll let you know when we can help, and you can choose to run the troubleshooter or ignore it. You must be connected to the internet to use recommended troubleshooting.
For example, a feature might not work as designed in a specific version of Windows because of an incompatibility caused by a bug found after release. We’ll use diagnostic data to identify devices that:
- Experience the crash
- Have the specific version of Windows impacted by the bug installed
- Have the incompatible app or driver installed
These devices will be offered Microsoft’s recommended troubleshooting for the problem, while other devices that aren’t experiencing the problem won’t. If it’s a critical problem, we’ll automatically run the troubleshooter to fix the problem, otherwise we’ll let you decide what to do.