HP has locked a few settings on your computer which are being managed by the system configuration as the device is configured to its optimal performance. However realising that other future updates may be designed to interact with that kernel, I turned off updates.Įventually they turned it on when I wasn't looking the other morning, and I walked in to find it saying it wanted to reboot after having done a (huge) win 10 update. HP PC's uses a customized BIOS setting of which some features including overclocking are locked. Then added it to a list of invisible kernels to future updates to avoid. I was steered to the item in the update and with an on line repair tool, turned that part of the update back to a previous item. The fan and hard drive kept running after everything else had shut down. Many moons ago, some weeks after upgrading to win 10 from 8.1 (which it says in the setup utility it says was the factory installed OS ), a win 10 update stopped this 360 from closing down properly. Comes up with the eventual message 'inaccessable boot device' - just like mine, and he has been steered towards the bios and is wondering if this latest BIOS F26 is the cause? It may be that the question stemmed from a recent win 10 update that stopped the computer booting.