Microsoft stops feature updates

Microsoft stops feature updates

It’s almost over for Windows 10. Microsoft will no longer add new features or improvements to its system by simply issuing security updates. And the 22H2 version will remain the last.

It’s over for Windows 10. Or almost. We have known for a while that the system was doomed in the short term, Microsoft having decided to stop all support in October 2025. But in a blog post quietly published on April 27, 2023, the publisher has just dealt it a new fatal blow by officially announcing the immediate cessation of functional updates. Clearly, Windows 10 will no longer receive any new functions or improvements until it is abandoned. Its last major version will remain 22H2, released in the fall of 2022. And Microsoft will not release a 23H2 version at the end of 2023 as we had hoped.

“As documented on the Windows 10 Enterprise and Education and Windows 10 Home and Pro lifecycle pages, Windows 10 will reach end of support on October 14, 2025. The current release, 22H2, will be the final release of Windows 10, and all editions will continue to receive monthly releases of security updates until that date”, explains Jason Leznek, product manager for Windows maintenance and delivery at Microsoft. In fact, if Windows 10 will no longer evolve, it will continue to benefit from security updates for a little over two years, until the fall of 2025. A condition sine qua non to be able to use the system serenely at a time when cyber threats are multiplying by taking advantage of the slightest security flaws.

End of Windows 10: version 22H2 mandatory to continue

The publisher therefore advises all Windows 10 users to upgrade to version 22H2 without delay to benefit from this guarantee until technical support ends (see our practical sheet to perform the update if you are using a version earlier), while encouraging a switch to Windows 11, its new system. A hard-march incentive that will make you cringe as Windows 11 refuses to run on older PCs due to technical requirements (see our compatibility article), even though there are various ways to circumvent the restrictions imposed (see our practical sheet for tips).

© Microsoft

If the end of Windows 10 had been scheduled for years, Microsoft’s announcement will not make people happy. Because after an unconvincing Windows 8 – and 8.1 –, this version released in 2015 has managed to seduce many users with its enriched functions, its redesigned interface and, above all, its remarkable stability, the famous blue screens of death (BSOD) and other major problems becoming increasingly rare. For some, Windows 10 has even reached near perfection – in the Microsoft universe – especially since it runs like clockwork on old PCs – including before 2010! No reason for them to upgrade to Windows 11, which doesn’t add much more than a few visual tweaks…

End of Windows 10: what to do with an old PC?

Anyway, despite the lack of anything new, you can continue to use Windows 10 without fear until October 2015. If your PC is compatible, you can also upgrade to Windows 11 for free now ( see our instructions for downloading Windows 11), even if it means inflating it a little by adding RAM or replacing its hard drive with a much faster SSD (see our practical sheet). Don’t worry if you buy a new computer, it will already be equipped with Windows 11 by its manufacturer – unless it is sold without an operating system! or if you switch to the Mac, of course!

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After October 14, 2025, on the other hand, it will be inadvisable to use a PC with Windows 10, because it will become vulnerable to threats – even if it will still work very well on the hardware level… But you can take this opportunity to install and discover another operating system, in particular a version of Linux (see our selection): there are indeed many free and legal distributions of this excellent alternative OS which work perfectly on old and/or less powerful computers, like Mint (see our practical sheet) which benefit from a modern and user-friendly interface by offering a host of practical functions while benefiting from the support of a vast community. An excellent solution to get out of the Microsoft ecosystem and move into the free world…

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