New
#570
There will be two 21H2's - one for W10 and one for W11. You can already get the enablement package for W10. The word 'major' is tricky - I believe there will still be 2 'feature updates' per year for W10, and one for W11. Sometimes a 'feature update' (which increments the version label) is not all that 'major'.
That only applies to Windows 11, for Windows 10 it remains as twice a year.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/lifecycle/faq/windowsMicrosoft said:
very good programs just for tweaker disable this stupid defender when running
Zippyshare.com - Win 10 Tweaker.exe
tweaks good and disable lots of features from stupid MS
latest zip is for all telemetry and others
The problem is that Windows 11 has new code in it that is not in Windows 10. Any time you add code to a program there is always the chance that you introduce new bugs. Also, Some of the new code may have conflicts with some of the old code. Together that means it is possible the newly release Windows 11 may have more bugs than the up-to-date Windows 10. Only the Windows 11 development team knows or will know in the next few months what the real answer is.
And that's what I had said all along. Whenever something new comes along, or a serious upgrade, there's always glitches that will occur and not just MS. Anything that goes from beta to open availability to the average person should have been better tested. But as I'm saying, bugs or glitches will always happen. And if it's something you buy, then "El Caveat Emptor"
Haven't seen much bugs myself in Windows 11, been running it now for like 2 weeks i think, runs just as well as my mature Windows 10 Laptop OS does, occasionally minor issues, but overall runs great for all the things i do
The problem with 'should have been better tested' is that there is an enormous universe of computer gear out there that is expected to run Windows, and it's simply impossible to test it all, or even a small fraction of all the possible permutations of hardware/software setups that people have going on. So 'availability to the average person' is essentially always going to be the 'next phase of testing', at least for something as complex and far-reaching as Windows.