I just saw something interesting running WinGet on multiple PCs here at Chez Tittel. On my production desktop (Flo6) running production Winget (Version 1.27.470.0) a Teams update just failed with error message “…system cannot find … file specified (0x80070002).” On my Canary test system (X12Hybrid) running preview Winget (Version 1.29.30.0) that very same update succeeded. Inevitable conclusion: WinGet version may affect installs and updates, including success or failure. Who knew? Let’s discuss…
Why WinGet Versions May Affect Installs
Copilot confirms my suspicion that version differences sometimes affect update or install behavior. It says (and I concur) “some WinGet releases and App installer builds handle extraction and temp paths differently; newer/older builds can succeed where others fail.” Isn’t that strange — but typical — for Windows stuff anyway?
Fortunately, the in-app updater in Teams popped up as soon as I opened the app up. It, at least, was able to update itself successfully. So I applied the old principle: if you can’t do it one way, try another, and got past this hurdle anyway.
Is It a Version, or an Instance?
Then I went looking at my other production level PCs here at Chez Tittel. I looked at 4 other machines in my office all running Windows 25H2 Build 26200.8037 (latest production build). None threw the same error, though all are on the same Windows, Winget and Terminal versions. Interesting! My other production machines, however, did post this warning (in yellow) after the Teams update:
“Successfully installed. Restart the application to complete the upgrade.” (That warning does not appear in the lead-in graphic, which comes from a preview WinGet version instead.)
I’m left with no choice to conclude that it’s the configuration of the particular machine (Flo6) that’s somehow suffering or different. Based on what Copilot told me, it’s likely a PATH issue of some kind. As the old Internet adage goes so well for Windows: YMMV. Indeed, it just did!

