extended security updates

  1. Chrome on Windows 10: Plan Now Before End of Support in 2025

    Chrome will probably keep working on Windows 10 for a while, but the underlying safety net is shrinking and the clock is real — plan now to avoid being cut off later. Background / Overview Windows 10 reached its formal end-of-support milestone on October 14, 2025, when Microsoft stopped shipping...
  2. AF_XDP Race Fix in Linux Kernel CVE-2025-37920

    A subtle synchronization bug in the Linux kernel’s AF_XDP (XSK) receive path has been fixed upstream — the change moves a spinlock from the per-socket structure into the shared UMEM pool to eliminate a race between RX and FILL processing when multiple sockets share a single umem. This...
  3. Windows 10 End of Support: HP Migration Guide to Windows 11 and ESU Bridge

    Microsoft’s support clock for Windows 10 has officially run out, and HP’s step‑by‑step upgrade briefing is the practical playbook many users and IT teams will follow as they move to Windows 11 or adopt a short‑term Extended Security Updates (ESU) bridge. The core facts are simple and...
  4. Windows 10 End of Support: Plan a Windows 11 Migration

    Microsoft and OEM guidance have made one thing clear: Windows 10’s support lifecycle has reached its end, and the safe, supported path forward for most users is migration to Windows 11 — a process that requires planning, backups, and a check of hardware requirements before you click “Upgrade.”...
  5. Dell’s 500M Windows 11 Gap Reframes the PC Upgrade Challenge

    Dell’s blunt investor math — “about 500 million PCs capable of running Windows 11 that haven’t been upgraded” — has forced a much larger industry truth into the open: the Windows 11 migration is not a single technical flip of a switch but a costly, multi-year program with security, economic, and...
  6. Windows 10 End of Life 2025: Migration Challenges and Next Steps

    Windows 10’s official retirement has not translated into immediate disappearance: roughly one billion personal computers worldwide continue to run the decade-old operating system, and industry telemetry and OEM commentary suggest the Windows 11 migration will be a slow, costly, and politically...
  7. Windows 11 on Incompatible PCs: Safe Upgrade Paths and Bypass Options

    Microsoft’s Windows 11 is still free for qualifying Windows 10 PCs, but the company’s strict hardware checks have left a large installed base officially “incompatible.” For many users the answer isn’t necessarily “buy new hardware” — there are well‑documented, practical ways to move to Windows...
  8. Windows 11 Edges Ahead in Headlines, but Windows 10 Remains Widespread

    Windows 11 has finally pulled ahead of Windows 10 in headline market-share figures — but the victory is both narrower and more complicated than it looks. StatCounter’s recent desktop dataset shows Windows 11 as the plurality desktop Windows version, while a huge, stubborn base of Windows 10...
  9. Windows 10 End of Support Sparks Upgrade Push and Security Risks

    Microsoft now faces a scaling cybersecurity and logistics problem: roughly one billion active PCs remain on Windows 10, and about half of those machines can run Windows 11 but have not been upgraded, a gap Dell flagged during its recent earnings call that industry watchers say dramatically...
  10. Windows 10 End of Support 2025: Plan Your Windows 11 Upgrade Now

    Windows 10's end-of-support is now an operational reality for millions of users worldwide, and the path forward — upgrade to Windows 11, enroll in a short-term Extended Security Updates (ESU) program, or replace the device — requires clear planning, tested procedures, and realistic timelines to...
  11. Windows 10 End of Support 2025: Upgrade to Windows 11 or ESU Options

    Microsoft’s fixed support clock for Windows 10 reached its deadline on 14 October 2025, and that change forces a clear choice for every Windows 10 user: upgrade to Windows 11 where possible, enroll in the short-term Consumer Extended Security Updates (ESU) program if eligible, or accept rising...
  12. Windows 10 End of Support: Navigating the Windows 11 Migration to 2026

    Microsoft’s gamble with a hard end-of-support date for Windows 10 has collided with reality: hundreds of millions — perhaps roughly one billion — of PCs remain on the decade-old OS, creating a security, operational, and commercial headache that will shape the PC market through 2026. Background...
  13. Windows 10 End of Support 2025: Steam Data Shows Slow Windows 11 Uptake

    As of this November’s Steam Hardware & Software Survey, Windows 10 may have officially lost Microsoft’s support on October 14, 2025, but it is emphatically not gone: roughly 29.06% of Steam users were still running Windows 10 in November, while Windows 11 jumped to about 65.59% — a meaningful...
  14. Windows 10 End of Support 2025: How to Upgrade to Windows 11 Safely

    Microsoft’s official lifecycle clock has run its course for Windows 10: on October 14, 2025 Microsoft ended mainstream support for Windows 10, and millions of PCs now face a concrete decision—upgrade to Windows 11, enroll in the short-term Consumer Extended Security Updates (ESU) program, or...
  15. Windows 10 End of Support 2025: ESU Options and Windows 11 Upgrade

    Windows 10 has reached its planned end of mainstream support: Microsoft stopped routine security updates, feature releases, and standard technical assistance on October 14, 2025, and users now face a clear choice between upgrading, buying time with a paid or free Extended Security Updates (ESU)...
  16. Dell Windows 11 Gap: 1.5B Devices Split Between Upgradeable and Incompatible

    Dell’s blunt investor math — roughly a billion PCs still running Windows 10, half of them effectively too old to run Windows 11 — has forced the industry to rethink what a modern Windows transition actually looks like and what it will cost in time, money, security and environmental impact...
  17. Dell: Windows 11 Migration Not Complete, A Slow Upgrade Cycle

    Dell’s blunt admission on its latest earnings call — that the Windows 11 migration “has not completed” — is a concise way of saying the modern Windows upgrade cycle is slower, messier, and more commercially complicated than many expected. The company’s COO, Jeffrey Clarke, told investors that...
  18. Windows 11 Upgrade Gap: 1.5B PCs Split Between Eligible and Ineligible Hardware

    Microsoft’s Windows migration story quietly fractured into two markets this autumn: roughly 500 million PCs that can run Windows 11 but haven’t upgraded, and another ~500 million machines that are too old to meet Microsoft’s hardware gate, leaving a staggeringly large installed base still on...
  19. Windows 11 Migration Realities: Dell Says 500M Can Upgrade, 500M Cannot

    Windows users are not rushing to the Windows 11 upgrade party, and the headline numbers driving that story come straight from an investor briefing that reframes the migration as a patchwork of technical limits, economic choices, and plain user inertia. Dell’s COO told investors that roughly 500...
  20. Windows 10 End of Support: ESU Options and Windows 11 Upgrade Push

    Microsoft’s official end-of-support for Windows 10 has made an already awkward transition into a full-blown market story: tens — if not hundreds — of millions of PCs remain un-upgraded, and Dell’s COO has put a stark number on the problem. On a recent earnings call Dell executive Jeffrey Clarke...