
Although Microsoft has not yet said how it will deal out the year's Windows 10 feature upgrades, it's becoming clear there's next to no reason for the company to diverge from 2019's major-minor cadence.As the death toll from the COVID-19 pandemic continues to climb worldwide, and the disruption of modern life and business continues to sow chaos, 2020 will be a tough year no matter how one cuts it.
In a time of unprecedented changes triggered by the novel coronavirus, there's no rationale to change what worked for Windows 10 last year.Microsoft, of course, will do what it wants — and commercial customers will have to deal with the results.
But there are good reasons why the Redmond, Wash.
company should seriously rethink any plan to mess with 2019's release scheme.To read this article in full, please click here