Microsoft’s safety net for Windows 10 is being pulled back — and for many users that comfortable, familiar desktop could become progressively less secure unless action is taken now. com]
Background / Overview
Windows 10 reached its official end of mainstream support on October 14, 2025. That...
I installed Windows 11 on a 10‑year‑old PC using Rufus’ built‑in bypass options — and it worked, but not magically: Rufus modifies the Windows 11 installer so the setup program skips Microsoft’s hardware gates, while the installed OS remains an unmodified Windows 11 image. This approach gives...
extendedsecurityupdates
legacy hardware
linux migration
microsoft 365 updates
privacy open source
proton gaming
rufus bypass
upgrade risks
windows 10 end of support
windows 11
windows 11 upgrade
windows end of support
Microsoft’s blunt deadline for Windows 10 users — upgrade before June or accept a “degraded security state” — is not hype: it reflects a real, measurable change in how the Windows boot chain will be trusted going forward, and it forces consumers and IT teams to choose between upgrading...
Microsoft and the PC industry have quietly opened a narrow but critical window to prevent a pre‑OS security gap this year: Windows will start rolling replacement Secure Boot certificates into device firmware via staged OS updates, while Microsoft is simultaneously intensifying its public push...
certificate authority
certificate expiration
certificate rotation
certificate updatesextendedsecurityupdates
firmware update
firmware updates
secure boot
uefi
upgrade windows 11
windows 10
windows 10 esu
windows 11
windows security
windows update
Windows 10’s retirement in October 2025 didn’t make it vanish overnight — it only sharpened the question users have been asking for years: when does a perfectly good tool become disposable? The MakeUseOf piece that kicked off this conversation captures the tension well: for many, Windows 10...
If your PC tells you “This device can’t run Windows 11,” don’t panic — you still have options. Microsoft’s official upgrade paths remain the safest route, but practical workarounds exist that let many older Windows 10 machines run Windows 11 today. This feature walks through the supported...
Microsoft’s vendor acknowledgment that the January security roll-up is causing some Windows 10 PCs to restart instead of shutting down marks a rare and uncomfortable convergence: an end‑of‑life OS still receiving paid security updates, and a modern, low‑level security feature colliding with...
Windows 10 didn’t “die” overnight, but the safety net did — and if you plan to keep using it, you need a plan today to reduce your risk of being hacked. The advice in PCMag’s recent primer is right: Windows 10 users can buy time, but they must harden their systems and either enroll in...
Windows 10 has reached its official end of support, but millions of machines still run it — and that reality means users must take immediate, practical steps to lower their risk of being hacked. Microsoft ended mainstream security updates for Windows 10 on October 14, 2025, and while a...
cybersecurity best practices
extendedsecurityupdates
microsoft defender antivirus
security best practices
windows 10 end of support
windows 11 migration
Windows 10 hasn’t quietly faded away into the archive; instead, the retired giant is showing an unexpected pulse — global usage of Windows 10 has ticked up even after Microsoft formally ended support on October 14, 2025. This reversal — logged by market trackers and discussed across tech outlets...
Almost half of private Windows PCs in Germany are still running Windows 10 — a stubborn statistic that carries more than nostalgia: it’s a security time bomb with a clear deadline. According to recent telemetry cited by cybersecurity firm ESET, roughly 48–48.5 percent of Windows installations in...
Germany’s decision to keep a surprisingly large slice of its desktop population on Windows 10 as the platform’s vendor-supported lifecycle draws to a close has turned a technical milestone into a national-scale security and policy conversation.
Background
Windows 10 reached its formal end of...
Almost every second Windows PC in Germany still runs Windows 10, even though Microsoft formally ended mainstream support for the platform on October 14, 2025 — a reality that has shifted the migration conversation from “if” to when and raised urgent security and policy questions for consumers...
extendedsecurityupdates
germany
germany cybersecurity policy
windows 10
windows 10 end of life
windows 10 end of support
windows 11
windows 11 migration
Microsoft has pushed the first Extended Security Updates (ESU) package for 2026 and confirmed what many administrators feared and some hoped for: a mandatory, high‑priority security rollout that fixes a large number of vulnerabilities and begins the phased replacement of Secure Boot certificates...
Microsoft’s formal removal of vendor servicing for the original Windows 10 release—commonly known as version 1507 or the “original release”—is the latest, definitive milestone in a decade-long lifecycle that has shaped how businesses and consumers manage Windows upgrades, security, and device...
Microsoft’s recent message to Windows 10 holdouts — “install the latest update” — is good advice, and it lands against a long, sometimes messy history of hidden or manually distributed cumulative updates that require a careful, practical response from both consumers and IT professionals...
The landscape for Windows 10 users just shifted from a long, slow countdown to an urgent operational decision: with Microsoft’s mainstream security updates ended, third‑party micropatching services such as 0patch have moved from curiosity to practical mitigation for many stuck on older hardware...
Microsoft drew a hard line on January 13, 2026: the last vendor-backed update pathway for the Windows Vista / Windows Server 2008 codebase has closed, leaving any remaining Server 2008 instances without official security patches from Microsoft. Background / Overview
Windows Server 2008 — the...
Microsoft’s oft-repeated line that “Windows 10 will be the last version of Windows” is now a piece of historical context rather than a roadmap — a pivot point that helps explain how Microsoft’s strategy shifted from versioned releases to continuous service and then, unexpectedly, back to a new...
Microsoft has finally torn off the bandage: the last vendor-supplied security updates for the Vista‑era Windows codebase — most notably Windows Server 2008 — have ended with the expiration of Microsoft’s Premium Assurance commitments on January 13, 2026. This final cutoff completes a long...