Microsoft has made more changes to its Windows 10 development model, changes that have implications for future releases.
What good is extended support for an ageing OS if businesses can't find a reseller to sell it?
Microsoft has revived a practice from the heydays of Internet Explorer, releasing tools to block the new all-Chromium Edge on Windows 10.
This marks the second time Microsoft has taken the upgrade reins since changing its servicing model.
The end of support in January for Windows 7 does not mean the end of support for Office 365 ProPlus.
When support for Windows 7 ends on 14 January, Microsoft will also stop providing new malware signatures for Security Essentials software.
By using group policy objects, IT admins can turn the browser into a front end for Office 365 with an enterprise-centric new tab page.
Although the name would indicate an April 2020 release, the company's past Windows upgrade tempo has rarely hit the mark.
The latest version of Windows relies on an 'enablement package' to turn on features that transform Windows 10 1903 into 1909.
The latest version of Windows 10 is little more than a rerun of the May version of the operating system, though it does offer a few new features.
In a bid to push website developers to speed up their site response times, Google may start flagging those that load slowly.
A release candidate of the Chromium-based browser can already be downloaded from Microsoft's website. The final version shows up in about 10 weeks.
One Google engineer called site isolation 'the single greatest advance in browser security since the creation of the sandbox.'
The January end-of-support deadline for Windows 7 is fast approaching. Here's a rundown of some of the issues companies should keep in mind.
As the January end-of-support deadline for the aged OS approaches, Microsoft is ramping up efforts to get users to move to Windows 10.