You installed an updated driver that made your Windows OS unstable and are regularly experiencing the BSOD. What would you use to go back to a state before the installation?
Run C:\System32\updates.exe /rollback:last
from the BSOD screen
Correct Incorrect Unanswered
Answer Description
System restore is a part of the Windows OS that allows you to restore your PC to a previous state. The available states are called restore points. A restore point is usually made after a significant change is made to the system.
Wikipedia
System Restore is a feature in Microsoft Windows that allows the user to revert their computer's state (including system files, installed applications, Windows Registry, and system settings) to that of a previous point in time, which can be used to recover from system malfunctions or other problems. First included in Windows Me, it has been included in all following desktop versions of Windows released since, excluding Windows Server. In Windows 10, System Restore is turned off by default and must be enabled by users in order to function. This does not affect personal files such as documents, music, pictures, and videos.
In prior Windows versions it was based on a file filter that watched changes for a certain set of file extensions, and then copied files before they were overwritten. An updated version of System Restore introduced by Windows Vista uses the Shadow Copy service as a backend (allowing block-level changes in files located in any directory on the volume to be monitored and backed up regardless of their location) and allows System Restore to be used from the Windows Recovery Environment in case the Windows installation no longer boots at all.
System_Restore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia