Windows 10 IoT Enterprise Security Patches Deployment Guide - Windows 10 ltsc 1809 support

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Windows 10 ltsc 1809 support.Windows 10 IoT Enterprise Security Patches Deployment Guide | Dell Suomi



 

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I have FH4 and played it a lot for a week or so but have not been back so FH5 not a priority. They also do the "DX12 only" nonsense in some games that aren't MS, wrc10, probably get some money from MS for that bit of nonsense. Just buying new equipment was the reason I have a newer win10, I still have LTSC on my M backup and that's no heavy gaming rig obviously.

I have had the updates turned off on and this version, Home , with no problems for years. A lot of the same stuff like the write filter so you've basically got a decently bulletproof windows to use when that's active. I know it was even virus proof in the xp and win 7 days, but not so sure about I haven't been running it long enough to determine. I used to be in corporate IT and had access to all manner of media and licenses, but now I'm a lowly 'home user' and I presume I'm stuck with Windows 10 Pro unless I'm willing to pay for extra licenses and pay more than once, by the sound of it.

To be honest, I've been using Win 10 Pro for over 5 years and it's been remarkably stable. I don't use the 'store', don't use 'cortana', and it seems pretty stable. MS keep nagging me to switch to a Microsoft Account, and that's pretty much the extent of my struggles with it.

It's absolutely silly to ask, and given LTSC doesn't get feature updates I don't think it'd get it, but doesn't hurt to ask. I'd really rather not use Win11 when my new system is delivered, but it's most likely I'll be running Enterprise. You can make due with Windows 10 as is just fine for the most part. It isn't that bad, there are just some edge cases where you have to sort of be aware of how the process scheduler works.

Windows 10 schedules below normal priority processes on E cores only by default. Ways around this are: App developers can update their app to accommodate for this behavior; configure affected processes to run at "normal" priority instead of "below normal" or "low"; or, use the "High performance" Windows power profile which does not have this scheduling behavior.

Oh, I also wanted to mention that the Intel Alder Lake game dev guide has a direct but vague reference to thread director being partially backported.

You can just search the page for "backport" to find it. If Microsoft backports ITD support to Windows 10, it could come in a cumulative update patch, or it could come as part of the forthcoming Windows 10, version 22H2 update which we do know is coming, and will be released in the fall.

I personally think that it would make sense for them to do it sooner than fall. These will be launching over the next months. I'm referring to business laptops like Dell Latitude, workstation desktop systems with the W chipset, etc. Microsoft and OEMs have to know that while they can force Windows 11 on consumers, businesses aren't going to be ready to move off of Windows 10 yet, so waiting this amount of time would give them the maximum amount of time to pressure consumers towards Windows 11 while not making business IT departments too unhappy.

I personally think that they are likely to offer it to LTSC as well. They'll probably have to offer it to Windows Server so it just makes sense. If they wait until 22H2 to ship it, it might be not quite as easy to enable on LTSC, but still maybe possible as Windows 10, version 22H2 is likely to be released as an "enablement package" and not a full new build.

God forbid, that Microsoft start add new features as a new thread scheduler for modern Hybrid HW in older Win Hope it never happens.

If they do Be you sure they'll screw up even Win They just can't do it right. As a sidenote. Most of the benchers on hwbot continue use Win 10 over Win 11 for max performance. This just show their trust in Win What's probably the most important takeaway from this article is that Windows 10 works very well with Alder Lake despite the lack of support for the Hybrid architectures or Thread Director.

In the vast majority of cases, you'll barely notice any difference between Windows 10 and Windows Honestly, the Winduhz 11 "scheduler" doesn't seem to do a damn thing as far as I can tell. I can't point to one single thing that makes Winduhz 11 a better OS to use. Not one. Don't waste your time with it.

It's a piece of crap. Fox YouTube Channel Mr. The average response time for a call is 10 minutes. The response time of a. It's so difficult to understand how anyone could actually like it and think it's good.

But, in some countries various things that are disgusting, like insects and rodents, are consumed on a regular basis and sometimes considered delicacies, so go figure. The function itself, like the core isolation, can be activated or deactivated.

There were already some problems that even correct drivers could not be installed. On the other hand, there are always reports of malicious drivers. The Microsoft Vulnerable Driver Block List is designed to help block malicious drivers with a synchronized list. I don't think it's really a case of 'liking it' as opposed to 'learning to live with it'. I don't have ready access to media any longer, so if I can learn to live with 11, life is just easier.

My approach is, see if I can tolerate it and get used to it, before going to the trouble of backing it out. Sergiu Gatlan Sergiu Gatlan has covered cybersecurity, technology, and a few other topics for over a decade. Email or Twitter DMs for tips. Previous Article Next Article. You may also like:. Popular Stories. Login Username. Remember Me. Sign in anonymously. Nothing new there. Microsoft almost always cites customer feedback — that term used in a broad fashion, one that can even include telemetry sourced from Windows devices — when it changes products' lifecycles and the support it "owes" users.

Microsoft also often leans on the feedback line when it makes changes that might get pushback from customers. But Lurie's point that it was difficult or even impossible to give customers "the up-to-date experience" with software older than five years rang hollow. After all, those who selected LTSC did so because they valued long-term stability over the latest shiny, yes?

Microsoft has a tendency to leave the obvious unsaid when it alters policies, as it has here. It's no coincidence that LTSC doesn't fit a subscription-based worldview. Windows 10 LTSC's support reduction is simply a part of Microsoft's continued deprecation of on-premises, perpetually-licensed software. LTSC is not a licensed product; it is simply a release mode of Windows 10 Enterprise, which can be licensed via subscription, say, within Microsoft , or via traditional perpetual licensing.

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Windows 10 ltsc 1809 support.Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2019



 

Microsoft: Windows 10 and have reached end of service By Sergiu Gatlan. May 12, PM 0. Windows 10 in broad deployment Microsoft added Windows 10 to the broad deployment channel , making it available to everyone via Windows Update starting February Sergiu Gatlan Sergiu Gatlan has covered cybersecurity, technology, and a few other topics for over a decade.

Email or Twitter DMs for tips. Previous Article Next Article. You may also like:. Popular Stories. Login Username. Remember Me. Sign in anonymously. As a sidenote. Most of the benchers on hwbot continue use Win 10 over Win 11 for max performance.

This just show their trust in Win What's probably the most important takeaway from this article is that Windows 10 works very well with Alder Lake despite the lack of support for the Hybrid architectures or Thread Director. In the vast majority of cases, you'll barely notice any difference between Windows 10 and Windows Honestly, the Winduhz 11 "scheduler" doesn't seem to do a damn thing as far as I can tell.

I can't point to one single thing that makes Winduhz 11 a better OS to use. Not one. Don't waste your time with it. It's a piece of crap. Fox YouTube Channel Mr.

The average response time for a call is 10 minutes. The response time of a. It's so difficult to understand how anyone could actually like it and think it's good. But, in some countries various things that are disgusting, like insects and rodents, are consumed on a regular basis and sometimes considered delicacies, so go figure. The function itself, like the core isolation, can be activated or deactivated. There were already some problems that even correct drivers could not be installed.

On the other hand, there are always reports of malicious drivers. The Microsoft Vulnerable Driver Block List is designed to help block malicious drivers with a synchronized list. I don't think it's really a case of 'liking it' as opposed to 'learning to live with it'. I don't have ready access to media any longer, so if I can learn to live with 11, life is just easier. My approach is, see if I can tolerate it and get used to it, before going to the trouble of backing it out.

So far, I'm reasonably tolerating it! I can certainly see the logic of that, and for the average user that is probably more their speed in terms of technical skill. But, it is still a hell of a note to learn to put up with crap when you have other options available that work better. Learning to live with it instead of rejecting it helps facilitate the dumbing down of the product because the Redmond Retards expect everyone to put up and shut up. We can expect things to degrade more than they already have if that is the common approach.

And, sadly, it seems to be. The same problematic approach has also been extremely harmful to those with higher expectations on the hardware side of computing. It is certainly easier to go with the flow than it is to take a stand.

Speaking of undesirable change It also helps identify how long things have been allowed to remain screwed up because people tolerate crap. Example is the crummy Start Menu that has sucked on every version that followed Windows 7. I was a huge fan of windows 7, and was horrified by windows 8.

Windows 10 was a slight improvement over 8. Just how much worse W11 is compared to W10 remains to be seen. But I don't quite see how one is to meaningfully 'reject' these newer releases, when MS get their license money on new laptop sales no matter which version you end up using. As a lowly 'end user', no longer having access to corporate licensing having retired from the business , it's not clear how I can 'reject' W11 unless I'm willing to pay quite a bit extra for licenses.

But has it been all bad? When, exactly, did display scaling get introduced? I remember buying a stack of W7 Laptops for work back in the day, and being almost unable to use them due to them having very high resolution screens, and no meaningful way to reduce the display resolution text was so small as to be unreadable.

I may be wrong but I thought W10 was when practical display scaling came into existence. Not all bad, just mostly bad. I don't use display scaling if I can avoid it. It helps but has issues. Not everything scales correctly. I choose a laptop with the screen of the proper resolution for comfortable viewing without any scaling.

I think the idea of having a 4K screen on a laptop is idiotic. It is way too small. So, it doesn't cost much. Usually about half that much for OEM keys. I realize even suggesting something requiring enough technical skill as a format and reinstall terrifies the average computer user even though it is not a difficult task. It makes me sad to know many are held hostage due to their own fear. Some believe having the newest OS version means they already have the best option. This is a dead giveaway that they are ignorant and lacking in technical strength.

While you do have to pay up for a license for Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC which I have been "promoting", along with others , you don't have to pay anything to move from Windows 11 to Windows 10 if you just use the same edition Pro or Home or whatever.

Microsoft allows downgrades. In fact, Windows 10 and Windows 11 product keys are cross-compatible and come from the same pool, so I think you should be able to activate one or the other without issue. Now, going this route would only be advisable for users who are comfortable doing a fresh Windows install, and of course there may be issues finding Windows 10 drivers for a system that shipped with Windows 11 if the OEM is not providing them.

Not really a problem at the moment, with most systems, but this will get worse over time. Getting media is not a problem. Microsoft makes it available for free.

No, it's not all bad. I'd argue that Windows 10 brought its fair share of legitimate improvements. Serious display scaling improvements, as you mention. As an aside, I'm not of the same opinion as Mr. Fox here. Admittedly, I do occasionally have to change compatibility settings on a broken app to disable scaling.

Other improvements that come to mind are WSL, a very awesome feature for people using Windows who are familiar with Linux developer types in particular. System-wide dark mode is nice. While Windows 11 launched without any real improvements other than the "fresh coat of paint", I would say, it's getting some more interesting things like Android app support and finally tabs for File Explorer.

My problem with the direction of Windows basically focuses on the increasing pervasiveness of monetization features, treating ordinary users as "beta testers" by pushing out new builds and features before they have been through a proper QC process, and Microsoft's lack of commitment to feature stability functionality changes are rolled up with security updates — you can't take one without the other, and that's not the way that things used to be.

Microsoft almost always cites customer feedback — that term used in a broad fashion, one that can even include telemetry sourced from Windows devices — when it changes products' lifecycles and the support it "owes" users.

Microsoft also often leans on the feedback line when it makes changes that might get pushback from customers. But Lurie's point that it was difficult or even impossible to give customers "the up-to-date experience" with software older than five years rang hollow. After all, those who selected LTSC did so because they valued long-term stability over the latest shiny, yes?

Microsoft has a tendency to leave the obvious unsaid when it alters policies, as it has here. It's no coincidence that LTSC doesn't fit a subscription-based worldview. Windows 10 LTSC's support reduction is simply a part of Microsoft's continued deprecation of on-premises, perpetually-licensed software.

LTSC is not a licensed product; it is simply a release mode of Windows 10 Enterprise, which can be licensed via subscription, say, within Microsoft , or via traditional perpetual licensing.

The reduction, then, can best be seen as a warning of Microsoft's plan to eventually discard the option for client-side devices. A five-year support loss today will almost certainly be followed by another, matching reduction that will excise the option. When that happens, Microsoft will probably assert that LTSC served its purpose — a bridge between a former release model and the current one — and so can be dropped, even if there are customers still keen for such an option.

More from the Foundry Network. Windows 10 update and retirement calendar: Mark these dates.

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