Microsoft’s decision to stop issuing free security updates for Windows 10 on 14 October 2025 has forced IT leaders into a binary choice: pay to buy time, or accelerate an estate-wide migration to Windows 11 — and the short-term cost of staying on Windows 10 could be measured in billions for...
Microsoft’s move to extend certain Windows 10 security updates changes the immediate calculus for businesses and IT teams — it is a pragmatic reprieve, not a permanent fix, and treating it as anything other than a final planning window risks expensive, complex consequences...
Microsoft has confirmed that Microsoft Edge and the Microsoft WebView2 Runtime will continue to receive updates on Windows 10 (22H2) through at least October 2028, ensuring that Progressive Web Apps (PWAs), WebView-dependent applications, and Edge-powered experiences like Copilot-related...
22h2
app-compatibility
browser lifecycle
browser security
browser-security
chromium edge
chromium-based
compatibility
copilot
cybersecurity
driver-lifecycles
edge
edge browser
edge updates
edge-lifecycle
embedded runtime
embedded web ui
end of life
end-of-support
enterprise it
enterprise-it
esu
extended security updates
firefox
hardware-refresh
hybrid web-native
microsoft 365 apps
microsoft edge
migration planning
nvidia-driver
os end of support
os lifecycle
patch management
progressive web apps
pwas
security-updates
software lifecycle
software patching
software-updates
web-runtime
webview2
webview2 updates
windows 10
windows 10 22h2
windows 10 support ends
windows-10
windows-10-22h2
Microsoft’s security roadmap for Windows is increasingly explicit: stronger protections will arrive, but many of them require newer silicon and faster refresh cycles — meaning organizations that want to stay secure will need to buy into both Windows 11 (and beyond) and modern hardware platforms...