Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jul 9
Microsoft Rolls Out Windows 11 Restore Tool for 8.5 Million-PC Crash Fallout
Updated
Updated · ZDNet · Jul 9

Microsoft Rolls Out Windows 11 Restore Tool for 8.5 Million-PC Crash Fallout

2 articles · Updated · ZDNet · Jul 9

Summary

  • Point-in-time Restore is now available across Windows editions, letting users roll a PC back to a previous working state from the recovery environment after serious failures.
  • Microsoft built the feature under its Windows Resiliency Initiative after the July 2024 CrowdStrike outage sent 8.5 million Windows machines into crash loops and often required hands-on fixes.
  • The tool creates one full-system snapshot a day, keeps the three most recent copies, and uses 2% of the system drive by default; PCs with drives of 200 GB or more get it turned on automatically.
  • Restoring can take 30 to 45 minutes and may require a 48-digit BitLocker key, while files saved locally after the snapshot are lost unless they were backed up to the cloud.
  • The release follows Quick Machine Recovery as Microsoft adds layered safeguards meant to reduce the impact of future large-scale Windows failures.

Insights

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