Microsoft died of Windows 10 Creators Update version

According to the update and death schedule of Windows updates, from October 9, 2018, Microsoft officially launched Windows 10 Creators Update (1703) after more than a year of release.

According to the update and death schedule of Windows updates, from October 9, 2018, Microsoft officially launched Windows 10 Creators Update (1703) after more than a year of release. Accordingly, Home, Pro, and Workstation versions will not receive support from Microsoft.

Meanwhile, versions of Windows 10 Creators Update Enterprise (enterprise) and Education (education) will continue to be supported for another year and will be officially declared dead on October 8, 2019.

Picture 1 of Microsoft died of Windows 10 Creators Update version

Under this roadmap, Fall Creators Update, April 2018 Update and October 2018 Update versions will still receive support from Microsoft until at least 2020.

You can follow the update route and death of Windows 10 versions in the image below.

Picture 2 of Microsoft died of Windows 10 Creators Update version

As expected, Fall Creators Update (1709) will be the next version to be killed and on April 9, 2019. At that time, perhaps the major update of the first half of 2019 (Redstone 6) is also being released by Microsoft.

Currently, users who sign up for Skip Ahead, Fast Rin or Windows Insider can already experience new features in Windows 10 Redstone 6.

Users who are using Windows 10 Creators Update and lower versions should soon upgrade to a higher version so that they can receive important security patches or new features on Windows 10.

See more:

  1. Microsoft recalls Windows 10 October 2018 Update to fix errors
  2. Microsoft will not notify you of the amount of memory required to install Windows 10 updates
  3. Microsoft stopped supporting Google Search application on Windows Phone
Update 24 May 2019
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