is a senior editor and author of Notepad , who has been covering all things Microsoft, PC, and tech for over 20 years.
Windows 10 is so popular that Windows 11 only overtook it in terms of usage just a few months ago. That’s why I’m surprised that Microsoft is still, kind of, going ahead with its end of support cutoff today.
At one point last year, I wasn’t sure if Microsoft was actually going to end support for Windows 10 on time. The software giant randomly reopened Windows 10 beta testing to add new features and improvements to a 10-year-old operating system, giving millions of users hope that the company would change its mind or at least lower the system requirements for Windows 11. Neither of those things is happening, though.
Microsoft is ending support for Windows 10 today, after originally releasing the OS on July 29th, 2015. The cutoff means Microsoft will no longer provide software updates from Windows Update, technical assistance, or security fixes for Windows 10. It’s a milestone moment for millions of users who can’t upgrade, businesses that don’t want to, and a company that’s increasingly looking at overhauling Windows with AI features.
I say Microsoft is kind of ending Windows 10 support today because consumers will be able to enable extended security updates for free (with a catch for most) to get another year’s worth of security fixes. Only businesses have been able to do this in the past, and it’s a clear admission from Microsoft that Windows 10 is simply too popular among consumers to be left without security patches.
Around 40 percent of Windows users are running Windows 10 right now, according to StatCounter. While a large part of that 40 percent will be businesses that can pay for up to three years of extra support, Valve says around 30 percent of all PC gamers are also still using Windows 10. That’s not too different from when 33 percent of all Steam PC gamers were still using Windows 7 after Microsoft ended support for that OS in January 2020.
The big difference this time around is that many Windows 10 users aren’t simply being stubborn about upgrading, they literally can’t. Microsoft tightened its hardware requirements for Windows 11, leaving behind millions of PCs that were sold during the launch of Windows 10 a decade ago. Windows 11 requires Intel 8th Gen Coffee Lake or Zen 2 CPUs and a Trusted Platform Module (TPM), two controversial system requirements that Microsoft has refused to lower (apart from some rare exceptions).
I fully expect millions of consumers to stick with Windows 10 as a result and wait until their machines are old enough to need upgrading. That’s probably why Microsoft opened up extended security updates for Windows 10 to consumers for the first time, although it’s only limited to a year for now and could quickly necessitate the purchase of extra OneDrive storage for Windows Backup for users outside of Europe. I wouldn’t be surprised if Microsoft sees a large number of users still on Windows 10 next year and decides to extend this program again. Businesses can buy up to three years of security updates, after all.
Another reason for Windows 10’s stickiness is the spectre of Windows 12 (or whatever the next release will be), which could easily drop during that three-year period of extended support. Why upgrade now when Microsoft’s next OS could present users with all-new features that require even more hardware, like an NPU?
Windows 10 was also considered a quality release of Windows, following a pattern of every other version of Windows being the one to upgrade to. People skipped Windows 8, Vista, and ME, but Windows 10, Windows 7, and Windows XP were hugely popular. It helped that Windows 10 corrected a lot of Windows 8’s wrongs, and it was built from the feedback of Windows users.
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