ASUS ROG Rapture GT-AXE11000 WIFI6E router review
Backforce One Plus Gaming Chair review
ASUS GeForce RTX 3080 Noctua OC review
AMD Ryzen 5 5600 review
PowerColor RX 6650 XT Hellhound White review
FSP Hydro PTM Pro (1200W PSU) review
ASUS ROG Radeon RX 6750 XT STRIX review
AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 2.0 - preview
Sapphire Radeon RX 6650 XT Nitro+ review
Sapphire Radeon RX 6950 XT Sapphire Nitro+ Pure review
Windows 10 support ends as of October 2025
Microsoft has released a timeline in which the current Windows 10 will go end of life, that specifically will be October 14, 2025. Next week, Microsoft will announce more about the next generation of Windows
The support page for Windows 10 Pro and Home reveals the date of October 14, 2025. Microsoft began supporting Windows 10 Home and Pro support on July 29, 2015, so Windows 10 will last precisely .. ten years, as with the previous Windows versions.
June 24, Microsoft will announce more about the next generation of Windows. This Microsoft event will be broadcast live on that day.
« Advertorial: Godeal24 Father's Day Sale: Windows 10 for $8 and save up to 60% · Windows 10 support ends as of October 2025
· Foremay Launches World's Fastest & Largest VPX SSDs »
Advertorial: Godeal24 Father's Day Sale: Windows 10 for $8 and save up to 60% - 06/15/2021 08:14 AM
Father’s Day is June 20, 2021. If you’ve been putting off shopping for the dads in your life, there are just 1 week left. But don’t worry, there’s plenty of time left to shop online. Godeal24 ...
Advertorial: Windows 10 Home key only $14 and Best Deals on CDKoffers - 06/11/2021 07:32 AM
This is not the first time we have offered you an offer on Windows 10 licenses and Microsoft Office packages. It will not be the last either, but it is certainly one of the juiciest ever: Windows 10 H...
Advertorial: Upgrade your home office: Windows 10 Pro for $15, Office for $28 - 06/04/2021 07:34 AM
Judge for yourself, where else can you get genuine Lifetime Activation for Windows 10 Pro OEM at a price of just $15?You no longer need to go to the store, you do not need to buy a license for a lot o...
Microsoft to hold event for Windows 10 refresh at the end of this month - 06/03/2021 08:37 AM
Microsoft has announced a digital event for June 24 to reveal what it plans to do with Windows. What this exactly means is still unclear, but other clues give us an idea....
Advertorial U2Keys: Early summer sale: Windows 10 Pro for $7.42 and Office 2019 Pro for $25.81 - 06/02/2021 08:11 AM
U2Key is offering some special Windows key licenses. Our collaboration is back to offer discount coupons of up to 52 percent so you can take Windows 10 Pro for less than 8$. One of the benefits of usi...
TheDeeGee
Senior Member
Posts: 7859
Joined: 2010-08-28
Senior Member
Posts: 7859
Joined: 2010-08-28
#5920690 Posted on: 06/15/2021 09:59 AM
10 years, which seems about right, but wasn't Windows 10 their last?
10 years, which seems about right, but wasn't Windows 10 their last?
Kaarme
Senior Member
Posts: 2901
Joined: 2013-03-10
Senior Member
Posts: 2901
Joined: 2013-03-10
#5920691 Posted on: 06/15/2021 10:12 AM
I guess it depends on how you look at it. I seem to remember that when Win10 was announced/released, MS said it intends to keep it running for a good long while but release multiple major updates for it. Those updates have certainly happened and 10 years is not a short time for a Windows to be the active OS, not just a legacy one still being supported. XP was the previous longest serving one with 6 years under its belt.
Considering the 4-core mainstream maximum period ended after the Win10 release, and things have been changing quite rapidly in general, I suppose MS feels like it needs to rebuild the OS once again. Apparently Win10 still needs to cope with the BIG-little thing, though.
Is it me or is that actually surprisingly soon?
I guess it depends on how you look at it. I seem to remember that when Win10 was announced/released, MS said it intends to keep it running for a good long while but release multiple major updates for it. Those updates have certainly happened and 10 years is not a short time for a Windows to be the active OS, not just a legacy one still being supported. XP was the previous longest serving one with 6 years under its belt.
Considering the 4-core mainstream maximum period ended after the Win10 release, and things have been changing quite rapidly in general, I suppose MS feels like it needs to rebuild the OS once again. Apparently Win10 still needs to cope with the BIG-little thing, though.
KissSh0t
Senior Member
Posts: 11084
Joined: 2011-10-22
Senior Member
Posts: 11084
Joined: 2011-10-22
#5920692 Posted on: 06/15/2021 10:17 AM
So there's a chance they will fix Windows 10 by 2025.............. right?
So there's a chance they will fix Windows 10 by 2025.............. right?
AlmondMan
Senior Member
Posts: 904
Joined: 2007-09-03
Senior Member
Posts: 904
Joined: 2007-09-03
#5920696 Posted on: 06/15/2021 10:40 AM
Going to be interesting seeing what the future of Windows will be. Looking forward to it.
Going to be interesting seeing what the future of Windows will be. Looking forward to it.
Click here to post a comment for this news story on the message forum.
Senior Member
Posts: 7932
Joined: 2010-10-16
Is it me or is that actually surprisingly soon?