This is an official Microsoft naming convention. Official Windows 7 SP1 standalone update files are typically named like: windows6.1-KB976932-X64.exe
The final entry was timestamped yesterday.
If you are trying to update an old Windows 7 machine, avoid this specific file. Instead: Check for Official Updates Microsoft Update Catalog
If you have this file and want to check if the hash matches, you can use built-in Windows tools:
The update package you've mentioned seems to reference specific Knowledge Base (KB) articles, but the hash ( b78b8e959e464f7a9d1df64477bb7326 ) seems to refer to a particular package or update rather than a standard KB article directly.
This is an official Microsoft naming convention. Official Windows 7 SP1 standalone update files are typically named like: windows6.1-KB976932-X64.exe
The final entry was timestamped yesterday. This is an official Microsoft naming convention
If you are trying to update an old Windows 7 machine, avoid this specific file. Instead: Check for Official Updates Microsoft Update Catalog This is an official Microsoft naming convention
If you have this file and want to check if the hash matches, you can use built-in Windows tools: This is an official Microsoft naming convention
The update package you've mentioned seems to reference specific Knowledge Base (KB) articles, but the hash ( b78b8e959e464f7a9d1df64477bb7326 ) seems to refer to a particular package or update rather than a standard KB article directly.