Support for Windows 10 has now ended as of October 14. Here's everything you need to know about how your PC is at risk, and ...
Hundreds of millions of PCs are still running Windows 10, and even with extended security updates, the population of unpatched PCs will spike over the next few years. How bad can it get?
If you still use Windows 10, you need to take action to ensure your PC still receives critical security updates.
Windows 10 has been the dominant operating system for nearly a decade, but its time is coming to an end. In April 2023, Microsoft confirmed that Windows 10, version 22H2, would be the final version of ...
The bells are ringing for Windows 10, and many users who have waited are now choosing to update to Windows 11. If you’re one of them, congratulations on continued security updates and new features, ...
Microsoft is ending support for most Windows 10 users tomorrow. After Oct. 14, PCs running Windows 10 will stop receiving security updates, leaving these machines vulnerable. You can enroll your PC in ...
Windows 10 was initially released in July 2015, around three years after the release of Windows 8. The update's main priority ...
Microsoft has reminded customers today that Windows 10 has reached the end of support and will no longer receive patches for newly discovered security vulnerabilities.
Following the end of official support, users have three options to continue receiving security updates on their PCs. The simplest approach is upgrading to Windows 11, ...
Four years after the launch of Windows 11, Microsoft is finally ending support for Windows 10, but what does that mean?
In what marks the end of an era, Microsoft has released the Windows 10 KB5066791 cumulative update, the final free update for ...
Microsoft no longer officially supports Windows 10, but you still have an option to get one year of free security updates.