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Future Holds Large Updates Instead of Stand-Alone Windows Releases

jones_supa writes: Jerry Nixon, a Microsoft developer evangelist, said at the Ignite conference in Chicago that Windows 10 "is the last version of Windows, so we're always working on Windows 10." Saying that is only half true. In fact, Microsoft will start working on large updates instead of stand-alone Windows releases, so the company would switch from a model that previously brought us new versions of Windows every three years, to a simpler one that's likely to bring big updates every two months. The company will also change the naming system for Windows, so instead of Windows $(version), the new operating system would be simply called Windows.

6 of 199 comments (clear)

  1. Enterprise Turnover? by rsmith-mac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For consumers this is likely a great thing. But given enterprise customers and their traditionally fickle software, how are they going to keep up with major Windows changes every few months?

    Even service packs break things, and those still aren't as complex as these proposed updates in some ways. Enterprise customers pretty much count on Windows not changing/ And even if Microsoft goes the LTS route, will they support one of these branches for 10+ years like Windows Server 2012 will be?

    1. Re:Enterprise Turnover? by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sigh....isn't it funny that when Nadella has MSFT do what the Linux guys have been crowing about for fucking EVER that everybody pisses their panties?

      For those that haven't bothered to even load Win 10 in a VM you have a "fast" and a "slow", both of which are set by the user under "Windows Updates/ Advanced", this is comparable to your "stable" or "LTS" and your "unstable" on your Linux distros. The stable will ONLY get security patches, the unstable will get new features, most OEM consumer installs will be set to the fast/unstable but again you can change it under WU or if you install yourself you can set it then.

      So its gonna be up to you folks, want only security updates for the life of the OS, or to only install every X numbers of years like in the past? Choose slow. If you want to get the latest and greatest? Choose fast.

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  2. How are they going to charge for this? by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Will this mean a move to a "subscription" model, where you have to pay to receive updates? I find it hard to believe that they will contunue to update everyone forever without a fee for the "new windows".

  3. Bypassing consumer resistance to poor design by BooleanJulian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Microsoft has a long history of releasing badly designed products- MSDOS 4,Windows Me, Vista, 8.0- and with the shift to updates, the public will lose their ability to vote with their wallets. Microsoft will do whatever it likes, and you will accept it or be unpatched. Microsoft has succeeded in ensuring that the customer has no power or voice.

    And everyone here is cheering it on...

  4. Re:Another feature copied from Linux? by penguinoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You mean you'll be able to do "apt-get dist-upgrade" in Windows?

    No... there will be differences. We're talking Microsoft, so there's gotta be a revenue stream in there somewhere. They're planning to pretend version numbers don't exist, so that when there's compatibility issues no one will know which version the program was compatible with nor which version they're running now. And there certainly won't be a package manager to deal with all the dependencies, so any incompatibility will be dealt with on a program by program basis.

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  5. Re:Firefox by SumDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Um...I actually like the FF/Chrome versioing. I was really hoping either IE or Safari would adopt it as well. If IE (or Spartan or whatever it's called now) goes to it, we'll finally see an end to a lot of corporate internal shit apps and technical debt. It will be painful at first, but once all the major browsers are on rolling updates, web app developers will be forced to make stuff that works correctly. Big shit companies that can't keep up will have to adapt or die.