Microsoft says, for once, Windows update isn't to blame for Galaxy Book4 laptops losing access to C: drive — the Galaxy Connect app was the culprit, and it's been taken down from Microsoft Store

Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra
Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra shown for illustrative purposes (Image credit: Tom's Hardware)

In early February, reports of Samsung laptops, Galaxy Book4 devices in particular, affected by a weird storage issue started to pop up. Users were seeing error messages on their laptops saying "C:\ is not accessible," locking them out of their system's main drive. At first, this felt like a Windows Update problem since the timing coincidentally aligned with one, but deeper investigation revealed otherwise.

But we do know that it would become impossible to access the drive once you faced the issue. You'd also be prevented from opening Office apps, system tools, web browsers, Quick Assist, and more that was stored on the C: drive. Administrative tasks or any other specific user operations might be affected, too, and users weren't able to uninstall updates or collect logs due to permission failures.

Latest Videos From

Around the same time, the February 2026 security update for Windows 11 had come out, leading some to believe it must've broken something, but that's not the case. Reports of this issue actually began emerging before the patch rolled out. Since the problem was discovered, Microsoft already logged it as a known issue on its website around ten days ago, and by March 16, it was marked as "externally resolved."

Microsoft has published a full recovery article for affected users that includes detailed steps to gain back control of your C: drive. To ensure something like this doesn't happen again, the company also pulled the Galaxy Connect app off the Microsoft Store and Samsung, and in the meantime, replaced it with an older version that's not broken. So, at the moment, only those already affected need to take action.

Google Preferred Source

Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.

Hassam Nasir
Contributing Writer

Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.

  • ezst036
    The culture is the problem. Windows Update has created this toxic culture where the only trust that people have in it is to break things, install things they don't want, and remove things they do want.

    The trust is gone. The toxicity is all Microsoft's fault.
    Reply
  • txfeinbergs
    I can agree with that. The last few times my computer starting acting up was due to bad windows updates. Due to this, I delay updates for up to a month (but I had one slip through which of course caused issues).
    Reply
  • BronxPCTech
    Calling a foul. Can they explain the exact methodology of a screen mirroring program screwing up C: drive access?
    Reply
  • BronxPCTech
    ezst036 said:
    The culture is the problem. Windows Update has created this toxic culture where the only trust that people have in it is to break things, install things they don't want, and remove things they do want.

    The trust is gone. The toxicity is all Microsoft's fault.
    I'm a Windows support tech and couldn't agree more. Since they started with AI updates, there have been nothing but problems.

    Microsoft LONG since urinated on the trust of its users.

    Their OS is, essentially, free now because the telemetry data from their spywar...sorry, AI, is more valuable to them than software sales.
    Reply