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Wednesday, August 26, 2015

windows 10

This article is about Windows 10 in general. For Windows 10 on smartphones and small tablets (under 8 inches in screen size), see Windows 10 Mobile.
"Windows 9" redirects here. For the series of Windows produced from 1995 to 2000, see Windows 9x.
Windows 10
A version of the Windows NT operating system
Windows 10 Logo.svg
Windows 10 build 10240 (RTM).png
Screenshot of Windows 10, Showing the Start Menu and Action Center
DeveloperMicrosoft
Released to
manufacturing
15 July 2015; 42 days ago (2015-07-15)
General
availability
29 July 2015; 28 days ago (2015-07-29)
Latest release10.0.10240
Latest preview10.0.10525 / 18 August 2015; 8 days ago (2015-08-18)[1]
Update methodWindows Update, Windows Store, Windows Server Update Services
PlatformsIA-32, x64
Kernel typeHybrid (Windows NT)
Preceded byWindows 8.1 (2013)
Official websitewww.microsoft.com/windows
Support status
  • Mainstream support until 13 October 2020,
  • Extended support until 14 October 2025[2]
Windows 10 (codenamed Threshold[3]) is an operating system developed by Microsoft as part of the Windows NT family of operating systems. Officially unveiled in September 2014 following a brief demo at Build 2014, the operating system entered a public beta testing process in October 2014, leading up to and continuing through the consumer release of Windows 10 on 29 July 2015,[4] and its release to volume licensing on 1 August 2015. To encourage its adoption, Microsoft announced that during its first year of availability, Windows 10 would be made available free of charge to users of genuine copies of eligible editions of Windows 7 or Windows 8.1.
Windows 10 introduces what Microsoft described as a "universal" application architecture; expanding on Metro-style apps, these apps can be designed to run across multiple Microsoft product families with nearly identical code—including PCs, tablets, smartphones, embedded systems, Xbox One, Surface Hub and HoloLens. Windows 10's user interface was revised to handle transitions between a mouse-oriented interface and a touchscreen-optimized interface based on available input devices—particularly on laplets; both interfaces include an updated Start menu that comprises a design similar to Windows 7 with 8's tiles. Windows 10 also introduces Task View, a virtual desktop system, the Microsoft Edge web browser and other new or updated applications, integrated support for fingerprint and face recognition login, new security features for enterprise environments, DirectX 12 and WDDM 2.0 to improve the operating system's graphics capabilities for games.
Microsoft described Windows 10 as an operating system as a service that would receive ongoing updates to its features and functionality, augmented with the ability for enterprise environments to receive non-critical updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that will only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their five-year lifespan of mainstream support. Terry Myerson, executive vice president of Microsoft's Windows and Devices Group, argued that the goal of this model was to reduce fragmentation across the Windows platform, as Microsoft aimed to have Windows 10 installed on at least one billion devices in the two to three years following its release.[5]
Windows 10 received mostly positive reviews upon its original release in July 2015; critics praised Microsoft's decision to downplay user interface mechanics introduced by Windows 8 (including the full screen apps and Start screen) in non-touch environments to provide a desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was panned for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of Windows 8. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of Cortana and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Edge—although the browser was criticized for being a work in progress that was not yet feature complete.
Criticism of Windows 10 was directed towards a belief that the operating system was more limiting in how users could control its operation; in particular, Windows Update installs all updates automatically, no longer allows users to selectively install updates, and only the Pro edition of Windows 10 can "defer" the installation of "upgrades" for the operating system. Privacy concerns were also voiced by critics and advocates, as the operating system's default settings and certain features require the transmission of user data to Microsoft or its partners.


Development[edit]

At the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, then chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, stated that the company intended to have a single ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices. "We won’t have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets—they’ll all come together."[6][7]
In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in Microsoft's Halo franchise.[3] Similarly to "Blue" (which became Windows 8.1),[8] Foley called Threshold a "wave of operating systems" across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. Foley reported that among the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar Windows NT kernel).[3][9] It was speculated that Threshold would be branded as "Windows 9".[10]
In April 2014, at the Build Conference, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson stated that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[11][12] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a "universal Windows app", allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[11][13][14][15]
In July 2014, Microsoft's new CEO Satya Nadella explained that the company was planning to "streamline the next version of Windows from three operating systems into one single converged operating system for screens of all sizes", unifying Windows, Windows Phone, and Windows Embedded around a common architecture and a unified application ecosystem. However, Nadella stated that these internal changes would not have any effect on how the operating systems are marketed and sold.[16][17] Screenshots of a Windows build which purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps[9] followed by a further screenshot in September 2014 of a build identifying itself as "Windows Technical Preview", numbered 9834, showing a new virtual desktop system, a notification center, and a new File Explorer icon.[18]

Announcement[edit]

Threshold was officially unveiled during a media event on 30 September 2014, under the name Windows 10; Myerson said that Windows 10 would be Microsoft's "most comprehensive platform ever", providing a single, unified platform for desktop computers, laptops, tablets, smartphones, and all-in-one devices.[10][19][20] He emphasized that Windows 10 would take steps towards restoring user interface mechanics from Windows 7 to improve the experience for users on non-touch devices, noting criticism of Windows 8's touch-oriented interface by keyboard and mouse users.[21][22] Despite these concessions, Myerson noted that the touch-oriented interface would "evolve" as well on 10.[23] In describing the changes, Joe Belfiore likened the two operating systems to electric cars, comparing Windows 7 to a first-generation Toyota Prius hybrid, and Windows 10 to an all-electric Tesla—considering the latter to be an extension of the technology first introduced in the former.[24]
Microsoft has not clarified the reasoning for naming the new operating system Windows 10 instead of Windows 9; however, Terry Myerson has stated that "based on the product that's coming, and just how different our approach will be overall, it wouldn't be right to call it Windows 9." He also joked that they could not call it "Windows One" (alluding to several recent Microsoft products with a similar brand, such as OneNote, Xbox One and OneDrive) because they had already made a Windows 1.[10]
Further details surrounding Windows 10's consumer-oriented features were presented during another media event held on 21 January 2015, entitled "Windows 10: The Next Chapter". The keynote featured the unveiling of Cortana integration within the operating system, new Xbox-oriented features, Windows 10 for phones and small tablets, an updated Office Mobile suite, Surface Hub—a large-screened Windows 10 device for enterprise collaboration based upon Perceptive Pixel technology,[25] along with HoloLensaugmented reality eyewear and an associated platform for building apps that can render holograms through HoloLens.[26]

Release[edit]

On 1 June 2015, Microsoft first promoted that Windows 10 would be released on 29 July 2015.[4] Microsoft began an advertising campaign centring around Windows 10, "Upgrade Your World", on 20 July 2015 with the premiere of television commercials in Australia, France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. The commercials focused on the tagline "A more human way to do", emphasizing new features and technologies supported by Windows 10 that sought to provide a more "personal" experience to users.[27][28] The campaign culminated with launch events in thirteen cities on 29 July, which celebrated "the unprecedented role our biggest fans played in the development of Windows 10".[29]

Features[edit]

A major aspect of Windows 10 is a focus on harmonizing user experiences and functionality between different classes of devices, along with addressing shortcomings in the Windows user interface that were introduced in Windows 8.[21][22][30] Continuing with this pattern, the successor to Windows Phone 8.1 unveiled at the same event is also branded as Windows 10, and shares some user interface elements and apps with its PC counterpart.[31]
The Windows Runtime app ecosystem was revised into the Universal Windows Platform (UWP).[32][13][33] These "universal" apps are made to run across multiple platforms and device classes, including smartphones, tablets, Xbox One consoles, and other compatible Windows 10 devices. Windows apps share code across platforms, have responsive designs that adapt to the needs of the device and available inputs, can synchronize data between Windows 10 devices (including notifications, credentials, and allowing cross-platform multiplayer for games), and are distributed through a unified Windows Store. Developers can allow "cross-buys", where purchased licenses for an app apply to all of the user's compatible devices, rather than only the one they purchased on (i.e. a user purchasing an app on PC is also entitled to use the smartphone version at no extra cost).[14][34][35]
On Windows 10, Windows Store serves as a unified storefront for apps, Groove music (formerly Xbox Music), and Movies & TV (formerly Xbox Video).[36] Windows 10 also allows web apps and desktop software (using either Win32 or .NET Framework) to be packaged for distribution on the Windows Store. Desktop software distributed through Windows Store is packaged using the App-V system to allow sandboxing.[37][38]

User interface and desktop[edit]

The "Task View" display is a new feature to Windows 10, allowing the use of multiple workspaces.
A new iteration of the Start menu is used on the Windows 10 desktop, with a list of places and other options on the left side, and tiles representing applications on the right. The menu can be resized, and expanded into a full-screen display, which is the default option in Tablet mode.[21][30][39] A new virtual desktop system known as Task View was added. Clicking the Task View button on the taskbar or swiping from the left side of the screen displays all open windows and allows users to switch between them, or switch between multiple workspaces.[21][30] Windows Store apps, which previously could be used only in full screen mode, can now be used in self-contained windows similarly to other programs.[21][30] Program windows can now be snapped to quadrants of the screen by dragging them to the corner. When a window is snapped to one side of the screen, the user is prompted to choose a second window to fill the unused side of the screen (called "Snap Assist").[30] Windows' system icons were also changed to a new, minimalist design.[39]
Charms have been removed; their functionality in Windows Store apps is accessed from an App commands menu on their titlebar.[21][30] In its place is Action Center, which displays notifications and settings toggles. It is accessed by clicking an icon in the system tray, or dragging from the right of the screen. Notifications can be synced between multiple devices.[31][39] The Settings app (formerly PC Settings) was refreshed and now includes more options that were previously exclusive to the desktop Control Panel.[40][41]
Windows 10 is designed to adapt its user interface based on the type of device being used and available input methods. It offers two separate user interface modes: a user interface optimized for mouse and keyboard, and a "Tablet mode" designed for touchscreens. Users can toggle between these two modes at any time, and Windows can prompt or automatically switch when certain events occur, such as disabling Tablet mode on a tablet if a keyboard or mouse is plugged in, or when a laplet is switched to its laptop state. In Tablet mode, programs default to a maximized view, and the taskbar contains a back button and hides buttons for opened or pinned programs; Task View is used instead to switch between programs. The full screen Start menu is used in this mode, similarly to Windows 8, but scrolls vertically instead of horizontally.[22][42][43][44]

System and security[edit]

Windows 10 incorporates multi-factor authentication technology based upon standards developed by the FIDO Alliance.[45] The operating system includes improved support for biometric authentication through the Windows Hello and Passport platforms; devices with supported cameras (requiring infrared illumination, such as Intel RealSense) allow users to login with face- or iris-recognition, similarly to Kinect. Devices with supported readers support fingerprint-recognition login. Credentials are stored locally and protected using asymmetric encryption. The Passport platform allows networks, software and websites to authenticate users using either a PIN or biometric login to verify their identity, without sending a password.[46]
The enterprise version of Windows 10 offers additional security features; administrators can set up policies for the automatic encryption of sensitive data, and selectively block applications from accessing encrypted data. Windows 10 also offers Device Guard, a system which allows administrators to enforce a high security environment by blocking the execution of software that is not digitally signed by a trusted vendor or Microsoft, with a particular focus on blocking zero-day exploits. Device Guard runs inside a hypervisor, so that its operation remains separated from the operating system itself.[45][47]
To reduce the storage footprint of the operating system, Windows 10 automatically compresses system files. The system can reduce the storage footprint of Windows by approximately 1.5 GB for 32-bit systems and 2.6 GB for 64-bit systems. The level of compression used is dependent on a performance assessment performed during installations or by OEMs, which tests how much compression can be used without harming operating system performance. Furthermore, the Refresh and Reset functions use runtime system files instead, making a separate recovery partition redundant, allowing patches and updates to remain installed following the operation, and further reducing the amount of space required for Windows 10 by up to 12 GB. These functions replace the WIMBoot mode introduced on Windows 8.1 Update, which allowed OEMs to configure low-capacity devices with flash-based storage to use Windows system files out of the compressed WIM image typically used for installation and recovery.[48][49][50] Windows 10 also includes a related function in its Settings app known as Storage Sense, which allows users to view a breakdown of how their device's storage capacity is being used by different types of files, and determine whether certain types of files are saved to internal storage or an SD card by default.[51]

Online services and functionality[edit]

Windows 10 introduces a new default web browser, Microsoft Edge.[52] It features a new standards-compliant rendering engine forked from Trident, annotation tools, and offers integration with other Microsoft platforms present within Windows 10.[53][54] Internet Explorer 11 is maintained on Windows 10 for compatibility purposes, and is deprecated in favor of Edge.[55][56]
Windows 10 incorporates Microsoft's intelligent personal assistant, Cortana, which was first introduced with Windows Phone 8.1 in 2014. Cortana replaced Windows' embedded search feature, supporting both text and voice input. Many of its features are a direct carryover from Windows Phone, including integration with Bing, setting reminders, a Notebook feature for managing personal information, as well as searching for files, playing music, launching applications and setting reminders or sending emails.[57][58] Cortana is implemented as a universal search box located alongside the Start and Task View buttons, which can be hidden or condensed to a single button.[39]
Windows 10 also offers the Wi-Fi Sense feature originating from Windows Phone 8.1; users can optionally have their device automatically connect to "suggested" open hotspots, and share their home network's password with contacts (either via Skype, People, or Facebook) so they may automatically connect to the network on a Windows 10 device without needing to manually enter its password. Credentials are stored in an encrypted form on Microsoft servers, and sent to the devices of the selected contacts. Passwords are not viewable by the guest user, and the guest user is not allowed to access other computers or devices on the network. Wi-Fi Sense is not usable on 802.1X-encrypted networks, nor networks with "_optout" at the end of their SSID.[59]

Multimedia and gaming[edit]

Windows 10 provides heavier integration with the Xbox ecosystem: an updated Xbox app allows users to browse their game library (including both PC and Xbox console games), and Game DVR is also available using a keyboard shortcut, allowing users to save the last 30 seconds of gameplay as a video that can be shared to Xbox Live, OneDrive, or elsewhere.[60][61] Windows 10 also allows users to control and play games from an Xbox One console over a local network.[62] The Xbox Live SDK allows application developers to incorporate Xbox Live functionality into their apps, and future wireless Xbox One accessories, such as controllers, are supported on Windows with an adapter.[63] Candy Crush Saga and Microsoft Solitaire Collection are also bundled with Windows 10.[64][65]
Windows 10 adds FLAC and HEVC codecs and support for the Matroska media container, allowing these formats to be opened in Windows Media Player and other applications.[66][67][68]

DirectX 12[edit]

Windows 10 includes DirectX 12 alongside WDDM 2.0.[69][70] Unveiled March 2014 at GDC, DirectX 12 aims to provide "console-level efficiency" with "closer to the metal" access to hardware resources, and reduced CPU and graphics driver overhead.[71][72] Most of the performance improvements are achieved through low-level programming, which allow developers to use resources more efficiently and reduce single-threaded CPU bottlenecking caused by abstraction through higher level APIs.[73][74] DirectX 12 will also feature support for vendor agnostic multi-GPU setups.[75]
WDDM 2.0 introduces a new virtual memory management and allocation system to reduce workload on the kernel-mode driver.[69][76]

Removed features[edit]

Windows Media Center was discontinued, and is uninstalled when upgrading from a previous version of Windows.[77][78] Those who performed upgrades using a Windows installation that included Media Center receive universal app Windows DVD Player at no charge to maintain DVD playback functionality.[79]
The OneDrive built-in sync client, which was introduced in Windows 8.1, no longer supports offline placeholders for online-only files in Windows 10.[80][81] Functionality to view offline files is expected to be added sometime in the future in a new Windows app.[82]
Users are no longer able to synchronize Start menu layouts across all devices associated with a Microsoft account. A Microsoft developer justified the change by explaining that a user may have different applications they want to emphasize on each device that they use, rather than use the same configuration across each device. The ability to automatically install a Windows Store app across all devices associated with an account was also removed.[83]
The MSN Food & Drink, MSN Health & Fitness, and MSN Travel apps have been discontinued.[84]
The option to select various methods for downloading Windows Updates (or ignoring them completely) was removed. Windows 10 Pro and Enterprise users, if configured by the administrator, may defer updates, but only for a limited time.[85] Users consent to the automatic installation of all updates, features and drivers provided by the service, and to the automatic removal or changes to features being modified or no longer provided, under the end-user license agreement.[86]
Windows Help and Support, as a separate application with offline help, has been removed. Most help articles are available online.[citation needed]
Windows 10 no longer supports digital rights management systems SafeDisc or SecuROM.[87]

Editions and pricing[edit]

Main article: Windows 10 editions
Windows 10 is available in four main editions, of which the Home and Pro versions are sold at retail in most countries, and as pre-loaded software on new computers. Home is aimed at home users, while Pro is aimed at small businesses and enthusiasts. Each edition of Windows 10 includes all of the capabilities and features of the edition below it, and add additional features oriented towards their market segments; for example, Pro adds additional networking and security features such as BitLocker, Device Guard, Windows Update for Business, and the ability to join a domain. The remaining editions, Enterprise and Education, contain additional features aimed towards business environments, and are only available through volume licensing.[88][89]
An updated version of Microsoft's Windows Phone operating system for smartphones will also be released to accompany Windows 10. Due to Microsoft's unification strategy and its support for tablets, this operating system is branded as Windows 10 Mobile and is marketed as an edition of Windows 10, rather than as a separate product line.[90] Editions of Enterprise and Mobile will also be produced for embedded systems, along with Windows 10 IoT Core, which is designed specifically for use in small footprint, low-cost devices and Internet of Things (IoT) scenarios and is similar to Windows Embedded.[88][89]

Preview releases[edit]

See also: Windows Insider
A public beta program for Windows 10 known as the Windows Insider Program (previously Windows Technical Preview) began with the first publicly available preview release on 1 October 2014. Insider preview builds are aimed towards enthusiasts and enterprise users for the testing and evaluation of updates and new features.[91] Users of the Windows Insider program receive occasional updates to newer preview builds of the operating system and will continue to be able to evaluate preview releases after general availability (GA) in July 2015—this is in contrast to previous Windows beta programs, where public preview builds were released less frequently and only during the months preceding GA.[21][23][92][93][94]
Windows Insider builds will continue to be released following the RTM of Windows 10.[95][96]

Public release[edit]

Microsoft promoted that Windows 10 would become generally available (GA) on 29 July 2015. In comparison to previous Windows releases, which had a longer turnover between the release to manufacturing (RTM) and general release to allow for testing by vendors (and in some cases, the development of "upgrade kits" to prepare systems for installation of the new version), an HP executive explained that because it knew Microsoft targeted the operating system for a release in 2015, the company was able to optimize its then-current and upcoming products for Windows 10 in advance of its release, negating the need for such a milestone.[97]
The general availability build of Windows 10, numbered 10240, was first released on 15 July 2015 to Windows Insider channels for pre-launch testing prior to its formal release.[98][99] Although a Microsoft official stated that there would be no specific RTM build of Windows 10, 10240 was described as an "RTM" build by media outlets because it was released to all Windows Insider members at once (rather than to "Fast" ring members first), it no longer carried pre-release branding and desktop "watermark" text, and because its build number had mathematical connections to the number 10 in reference to the operating system's naming.[100][101][102][103][104][105] The Enterprise edition was released to volume licensing on 1 August 2015.[106]
Users are able to upgrade through the "Get Windows 10" application and Windows Update,[107] or the "Media Creation Tool", which is functionally identical to the Windows 8 version, can also be used to generate an ISO image or USB install media.[108] In-place upgrades are supported from Windows 7 with Service Pack 1 and Windows 8.1 with Update 1, while users with Windows 8 must first upgrade to Windows 8.1.[109] Windows 10 became available in 190 countries and 111 languages upon launch, and as part of efforts to "re-engage" with users in China, Microsoft also announced that it would partner with Qihoo and Tencent to help promote and distribute Windows 10 in China, and that Chinese PC maker Lenovo would provide assistance at its service centers and retail outlets for helping users upgrade to Windows 10.[110][111][112]
At retail, Windows 10 is priced similarly to editions of Windows 8. A Windows 10 Pro Pack license allows upgrades from Windows 10 Home to Windows 10 Pro.[113][114] Retail copies ship on USB flash drive media or DVD-ROM media.[115] New computers and devices running Windows 10 will also be released during the operating system's launch window.[116]
Windows RT devices (and Windows Phone), which run on the 32-bit ARM architecture, will receive a separate update with "some" of the changes of Windows 10 in the future, as such, Microsoft does not officially consider these devices to be directly compatible with Windows 10.[109][117] On 2 February 2015, Microsoft announced that it would provide a free ARM port of Windows 10 for Raspberry Pi 2 devices through its Internet of Things developer program.[118]

Licensing[edit]

Windows 10 licenses are not tied directly to a product key; during upgrades, the license status of the system's current installation of Windows is migrated, and a "Digital entitlement" is generated from the system's hardware and stored on Microsoft's activation servers. If Windows 10 is reinstalled cleanly on a system that it has already been installed on, and no product key is explicitly entered during installation, the online activation process will automatically recognize the system's Windows 10 license if there has not been any significant hardware changes. Unique product keys are still distributed within retail copies of Windows 10. As with previous versions of Windows, significant hardware changes will invalidate the digital entitlement, and require Windows to be re-activated.[119][120]

Upgrade and support[edit]

Update and support system[edit]

Windows 10 is serviced in a significantly different manner from previous releases of Windows. Its delivery is often described by Microsoft as a "service", due to its ongoing updates, with Terry Myerson explaining that Microsoft's aim is that "the question 'what version of Windows are you running' will cease to make sense."[121][122][123]
Unlike previous versions of Windows, Windows Update does not allow the selective installation of updates, and all updates (including patches, feature updates, and driver software) are downloaded and installed automatically. Users can only choose whether their system will reboot automatically to install updates when the system is inactive, or be notified to schedule a reboot.[124][125] Windows Update also uses a peer to peer system for distributing updates; by default, users' bandwidth is used to distribute previously downloaded updates to other users, in combination with Microsoft servers. Users can instead choose to only use peer-to-peer updates within their local area network.[126]
The Pro and Enterprise versions allow users to choose the "Current Branch for Business" release channel (referred to in Windows Update settings as "Defer upgrades"), which receives feature upgrades on a roughly four-month delay from their mainstream release.[127][125] CBB may defer feature upgrades for up to eight months, after which the update must be installed in order to maintain support and access to security updates.[128] Administrators can also use "Windows Update for Business" system to organize waved rollouts of updates across their networks.[125] Enterprise can also use the "Long-term support branch" (LTSB).[127] LTSB milestones of Windows 10 are periodic snapshots of Windows 10's CBB branch, and will receive only critical patches over their 10-year support lifecycle. Systems can also be placed one or two versions behind the most recent LTSB version to allow for structured deployments and internal lifecycles.[121][129][130] Microsoft director Stella Chernyak explained that "we have businesses [that] may have mission-critical environments where we respect the fact they want to test and stabilize the environment for a long time."[131]
Windows 10 support and update branches[121][132][133][134]
Update branchWindows Insider Preview Branch
(WIPB)
Beta software
Current Branch
(CB)
"Consumer grade"
Current Branch for Business
(CBB)
"Business ready"
Long Term Servicing Branch
(LTSB)
"Mission critical"
EditionEducation 
Enterprise
Home 
Pro 
Critical updates
Security patches and stability updates
Continuous as made available
(choice of slow or fast ring)
AutomaticAutomaticUser can defer updates indefinitely
Feature upgrades
Non-critical functionality and feature updates
Automatic or deferOnly through LTSB in-place upgrades
Feature upgrades cadenceContinuous as releasedProgressively after WIPB evaluation~4 months after CB evaluation or
defer for an additional ~8 months
With LTSB releases which are stable 'snapshots' of CBB
Upgrade supportContinuous updatingContinuous updating or in-place upgrade to supported LTSB versionsIn-place upgrade support for the three most recent LTSB versions
Update support10 years (or
until future updates require hardware support the old device doesn't have.)[135]
10 years (or
~8 months from deferring feature upgrade or until future updates require hardware support the old device doesn't have.)
5 years mainstream + 5 years extended
Update methodsWindows UpdateWindows Update
Windows Update for Business
Windows Server Update Services
Windows Update for Business
Windows Server Update Services
Per lifecycle policies, "Windows 10, released in July 2015" will receive mainstream support for five years after its original release, followed by five years of extended support, but this is subject to conditions. Microsoft's support lifecycle policy for the OS notes that "Updates are cumulative, with each update built upon all of the updates that preceded it", that "a device needs to install the latest update to remain supported", and that a device's ability to receive future updates will depend on hardware compatibility, driver availability, and whether the device is within the OEM's "support period"—a new aspect not accounted for in lifecycle policies for previous versions.[135][128] Microsoft initially stated that Windows 10 would freely receive updates for the "supported lifetime of the device."[121] To comply with U.S. accounting laws, revenue for Windows 10 is deferred "on a straight-line basis over the estimated period the software upgrades are expected to be provided by estimated device life", defined as two to four years depending on "customer type."[136]

In-place upgrade[edit]

In-place upgrade paths are supported for all editions of Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 (with the exception of Windows RT). Change of architecture editions during in-place upgrades is not supported (i.e. changing from a 32-bit edition to a 64-bit edition or vice-versa); a clean install is required.[119] There are no direct upgrade paths provided for Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 8, or Windows RT.

Free upgrade[edit]

Windows 10 free upgrade paths
Windows version and editionWindows 10 edition
7 StarterHome
7 Home Basic
7 Home Premium
8.1
8.1 with Bing
7 ProfessionalPro
7 Ultimate
8.1 Pro
During the first year of availability, upgrade licenses for Windows 10 will be available at no charge to users who own a genuine license for an eligible edition of Windows 7 or Windows 8, and have installed the latest service pack for their currently installed version (SP1 and Windows 8.1 respectively).[114][137][121] Enterprise customers under an active Software Assurance (SA) contract with Microsoft are entitled to obtain Windows 10 Enterprise under their existing terms, as with previous versions of Windows. Enterprise customers whose SA agreement is expired or are under a volume license that does not have upgrade rights, all users running non-genuine copies of Windows, and those without an existing Windows 7 or 8 license, are not entitled to freely upgrade to Windows 10; upgrading from a non-genuine version is possible, but will result in a non-genuine copy of 10.[110][121][138][139][95]
To properly activate and generate the "digital entitlement" for Windows 10, the operating system must first be installed as an in-place upgrade. Once installed, the operating system can be reinstalled on that particular system via normal means without a product key, and the system's license will automatically be detected via online activation.[119][120][140] The Windows Insider Preview version of Windows 10 automatically updated itself to the generally released version as part of the version progression, and continues to be updated to new beta builds, as it had throughout the testing process. It will only remain activated and considered genuine if the user continues opting into automatic updates to beta builds; if the user opts-out to stable builds, they must have a valid license for Windows 7, 8, or 10 to continue using the operating system. The license can be carried over from an in-place upgrade to 10 Insider Preview from Windows 7 or 8. Microsoft has explicitly stated that joining Windows Insider is not a valid upgrade path for those running Windows XP or Windows Vista.[95][96]
On 1 June 2015, the "Get Windows 10" application ("GWX") was activated on Windows devices running versions eligible to upgrade to, and compatible with, Windows 10. Via a system tray icon, users can access an application that advertises Windows 10 and the free upgrade offer, checks for device compatibility, and allows users to "reserve" an automatic download of the operating system upon its release.[141][142] On 28 July, a pre-download process began in which Windows 10 installation files were downloaded to some computers that had reserved it. Microsoft stated that those who reserved Windows 10 would be able to install it through Windows Update in a phased rollout process, although the OS can alternatively be downloaded using a separate "Media Creation Tool" setup program.

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