this post was submitted on 14 Mar 2026
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Can you still use the computer? Other than the home folder (or the user folder), I think it's fine if regular users go a week without touching their C drive until Microslop fixes it (which they will, inside like a week).
I use Windows at work, and it's fine. I do use the home/user folder just because it's there and it's how everything's set up, but there is no other drive to use instead. If I were using it at home, especially if I had a laptop, I'd want the home drive to be on an SSD I could move between machines... maybe. But, I use Macs at home.
I…. I can’t believe you are defending (or more accurately saying “it’s not that bad”) losing access to the root of your hard drive. It screams incompetence on Miroslop’s part.
And it screams incompetence on his part if he actually thinks this isn't a problem.
Well I'm obviously not, I'm just saying, if the system wouldn't boot at all, they'd lead with that. For most users, it won't matter. For the more technical users, we're either using Linux or macOS.
i put my computer stuff on the part of the computer where the stuff goes, losing access to the stuff on the computer would be a problem yes
from the article
Having a computer that cannot launch applications, let alone access files, is basically the same as not having a working computer.
But it can boot into Windows, which is also on the C drive? So it's not locking users out of the C drive, it's locking users out of parts of the C drive.
The boot process isn't an user process, Windows would still be able to use the C:/ drive for itself, for every other user software though, that's another story...
So only the user process is locked out of the C drive, not the boot/system. Fortunately, the way Windows 10/11 works by default, if you sign into a Microslop account, it backs all that stuff up to OneDrive. At least your documents. And no one's saying it's not bad, it just seems like most affected individuals will be able to go about most of their day. I have a Mac, so I ~~don't need to worry about any of this~~ have separate issues to worry about.
Having OneDrive wouldn't help as you still won't be able to use programs as a user, which is pretty much the reason we use computers in the first place, this bug effectively makes whole computers glorified paperweight in the meantime.
laughs in Linux
Hardly.
The system drive (very usually C:/) is where the Users folder lies by default (and you can't move it anyway IIRC), folder that contains stuff like the Appdata folder where... well... apps keeps their data like settings, history, backups... Most software will try to access it and would meet an "access denied" error.
This is also the default location for all the documents, music, videos, pictures,[...] folders (but you can change those though)
Basicaly you'd be limited to the "portable" versions of softwares located on other drives, which is not quite the norm on Windows.