Remembering what Windows 10 did right—and how it made modern Windows more annoying
摘要
2025年,Windows 10正式结束了微软官方支持,标志着其作为“Windows最终版本”时代的转折点。尽管家庭用户、学校和企业仍可通过不同方式获得延长安全更新,且部分核心应用支持将持续至2028年,但数据显示Windows 11已在全球及美国市场超越Windows 10成为最常用版本。随着官方支持的终止,软件、游戏和驱动程序正逐步减少或停止对Windo
If you've been following our coverage for the last few years, you'll already know that 2025 is the year that Windows 10 died. Technically.
"Died," because Microsoft's formal end-of-support date came and went on October 14, as the company had been saying for years. "Technically," because it's trivial for home users to get another free year of security updates with a few minutes of effort, and schools and businesses can get an additional two years of updates on top of that, and because load-bearing system apps like Edge and Windows Defender will keep getting updates through at least 2028 regardless.
But 2025 was undoubtedly a tipping point for the so-called "last version of Windows." StatCounter data says Windows 11 has overtaken Windows 10 as the most-used version of Windows both in the US (February 2025) and worldwide (July 2025). Its market share slid from just over 44 percent to just under 31 percent in the Steam Hardware Survey. And now that Microsoft's support for the OS has formally ended, games, apps, and drivers are already beginning the gradual process of ending or scaling back official Windows 10 support.
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