Back in April, AMD’s CEO, Lisa Su, accidentally slipped a projected
July release date of Windows 10 into an investor call. That lead to
anticipation that Microsoft would make a date official at its BUILD 2015
conference, but that came and went with no further news, leaving many
to wonder if the projected date has been missed, or was wrong in the
first place.
Now The Verge claims Microsoft is still targeting a July 2015 release and is likely to hit that goal. The company was apparently timid about announcing a date at BUILD because, at the time, there was uncertainty over whether Windows 10 would be ready in time. Confidence has begun to grow as of late, however, and the July release now looks very likely.
This is all still speculation and rumors, of course, and none of the information comes from an official, on-the-record source. A last-minute delay is still possible, even likely. Historically, Microsoft hasn’t launched a new version of Windows until several months after it hits a code-complete “release to manufacturing” status, but sources suggest things will be different this time around because of a company-wide effort to update and release software more aggressively.
Launching in July may mean some sacrifices, however. For example, Microsoft plans to pack extension support into the Edge browser, but that feature won’t be available at the release of Windows 10. Users should expect to see numerous, frequent updates to Windows 10 after release as a result of Microsoft’s new “Windows as a service” approach to its core product.
Now The Verge claims Microsoft is still targeting a July 2015 release and is likely to hit that goal. The company was apparently timid about announcing a date at BUILD because, at the time, there was uncertainty over whether Windows 10 would be ready in time. Confidence has begun to grow as of late, however, and the July release now looks very likely.
This is all still speculation and rumors, of course, and none of the information comes from an official, on-the-record source. A last-minute delay is still possible, even likely. Historically, Microsoft hasn’t launched a new version of Windows until several months after it hits a code-complete “release to manufacturing” status, but sources suggest things will be different this time around because of a company-wide effort to update and release software more aggressively.
Launching in July may mean some sacrifices, however. For example, Microsoft plans to pack extension support into the Edge browser, but that feature won’t be available at the release of Windows 10. Users should expect to see numerous, frequent updates to Windows 10 after release as a result of Microsoft’s new “Windows as a service” approach to its core product.
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