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After endless difficulties with the Windows 10 October 2018 update—finally re-released this month with the data-loss bug fixed—it seems that now it's the Office team's turn to release some updates that need to be un-released.

On November's Patch Tuesday two weeks ago, Microsoft released a bunch of updates for Office to update its Japanese calendars. In December 2017, Emperor Akihito announced that he would abdicate and that his son Naruhito would take his role as emperor. Each emperor has a corresponding era name, and calendars must be updated to reflect that new name. The Office patches offer updates to handle this event.

Two of these updates, KB2863821 and KB4461522, both for Office 2010, are apparently very broken, causing application crashes. The company has suspended delivery of the patches, but the problem is so severe that Microsoft is recommending that anyone who has installed the updates already should uninstall them pronto (see instructions for KB2863821 here and for KB4461522 here).

Users of Click-to-Run versions of Office (used by Office 365 subscriptions) shouldn't have to take any additional steps, as Click-to-Run Office should revert the patch automatically. Manual removal is only needed for the perpetually licensed Office versions.

Another patch, KB4461529, is also acknowledged as being problematic; specifically, it is causing 64-bit Outlook 2010 to crash on startup. The guidance for this patch is different—and rather unsatisfactory. Unlike the other two patches, KB4461529 is a security update, so removing it is not recommended due to the vulnerability it would expose. Instead, Microsoft is suggesting that Outlook users use Outlook Web Access to access their mail. Given that this particular crash seems to occur immediately on starting the application, one wonders how exactly it ever shipped; even the most cursory of testing would have demonstrated the problem.

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Ars Technica

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