Windows 10. Microsoft's UNPRECEDENTED decision

Windows 10. Microsoft surprised the whole world with an unprecedented decision for its operating system, the recent humiliations leaving their mark on the company.

Windows 10 2020

Windows 10. Microsoft took the whole planet by surprise with a decision that no one expected, but it is a good omen, because it is meant to bring us a operating system with fewer problems than in "normal mode". More precisely, the Microsoft company has started testing a new version of Windows 10 that it will release only somewhere in 2020, being the first time that a testing process of this kind begins so long before the actual release of the update.

Windows 10. Microsoft has started offering beta users a version with the code name 20H1, which is more advanced than 19H2, which will be released in the fall of this year. The new features for this 2020 update for Windows 10 have not yet been revealed by Microsoft, but based on the code number with which it is registered, it seems that it will be offered sometime in the spring of next year, most likely.

Windows 10 is testing an update that will be released in ... 2020

Windows 10. Considering how many problems all the updates released by Microsoft have had in the last year, maybe this should be the "new normal", and the updates should be tested a year before they are released. Until the 20H1 update for Windows 10 is released, we will have 19H1 and 19H2, so there will be enough time for changes, for corrections, and for the implementation of new functions, all in the hope that the releases will be made without the problems until now.

Microsoft has started testing an update to Windows 10 that it plans to release in 2020. It's unusual for the company to test updates so far in advance, as Microsoft typically releases two updates per year and tests them with members of the public. Due in the first half of 2020, and codenamed 20H1.

Windows 10. Microsoft made a fool of itself with the latest update, which it relaunched about 2 times after it generated extremely serious problems for the clients' computers where it was installed. It is possible that the managers dealing with the development of Windows 10 within Microsoft were seriously "pulled by the ears" because of these problems, so they thought of an "alternative solution" to have trouble-free releases.