A remarkable development; but saddening that Microsoft continues its now well-worn pattern of arrogantly taking over every element of the process to prevent it from being easy for less-technically inclined users, particularly home users. It should be pointed out as often as possible that Microsoft's Troubleshooters do very little good; and despite being recommended over and over and over again by MS tech support, they fail to find anything wrong or find that they cannot do the repair. My question which I pray can finally be answered is, will the introduction of this process grant Windows 10 users the restoration of the hated and broken Microsoft Store, and the numerous basic applications which were also destroyed alongside it by Windows Update? Once valuable and basic-beyond-basic applications such as a calculator, alarms and timers, the Photos app and its (hidden) Video Editor are all unavailable and permanently broken, and the hundred-thousand step, highly technical, and nearly-impossible to follow solutions offered in Microsoft's "community" help website require that all non-Microsoft software on the computer must be wiped out in order to have these few basic tools. It's unimaginable that the three non-MS browsers I use, the Zoom program with its carefully assembled meeting schedules, all disc burning tools, all audio file editors, all other photo editors, all PDF viewers and "pro" creator programs, and the dozens of tweaking extensions to mediate the internet, plus all of the word processing, spreadsheet, and other office software, all of the printing devices, all of the particular settings of files into Libraries, the book editors, file organizers and disc management tools must all be destroyed in order to restore less than a handful of very basic tools that are like freeware bits of the Operating System. Sorry for a momentary slip into near-rant mode; but it is simply unconscionable to think that this will continue to be addressed to broad OS issues and fail to restore the applications that every Windows user has already paid for and made part of our daily routines until the notorious Update broke them. I sincerely hope that isn't true; and that isolated corruption of files and individual issue solutions will FINALLY be made available to Windows users. Thanks!!