Microsoft has begun rolling out the Windows 10 November 2021 Update (21H2), a glorified patch that won’t do much to improve your PC. Microsoft also said Tuesday that the company is ditching its biannual update schedule in favor of an annual cadence that aligns with its Windows 11 rollout schedule.
Microsoft said that the new Windows 10 November 2021 Update can be asked for, as usual, by going to the Windows 10 Settings menu and then going to Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update and clicking the “Check for updates” button.
Realistically, though, there’s no reason to hurry. Microsoft listed the three “features” of Windows 10 21H2 earlier:
Adding WPA3 H2E standards support for enhanced Wi-Fi securityWindows Hello for Business introduces a new deployment method called cloud trust to support simplified passwordless deployments and achieve a deploy-to-run state within a few minutesGPU compute support in the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) and Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows (EFLOW) deployments for machine learning and other compute intensive workflows
To be fair, WPA3 H2E helps secure PCs by preventing side-channel Wi-Fi attacks, so that’s helpful. And GPU compute support within the Windows Subsystem for Linux allows for machine learning and computational capabilities (such as password cracking) within the WSL framework, and not just Windows. Still, both are arguably niche applications. Of more use will be a number of bug fixes, many of which will be hardly noticeable.
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Microsoft also said that it’s moving to an annual cadence of providing updates, meaning that you won’t have to worry about another “major” feature update until the second half of 2022. “We will continue to support at least one version of Windows 10 through Oct. 14, 2025,” Microsoft said in a blog post, reiterating its previous guidance.
Home and Pro editions of the November 2021 Update will receive 18 months of servicing and support, and Enterprise and Education editions will receive 30 months of servicing and support beginning today, Microsoft added.
Author: Mark Hachman, Senior Editor
As PCWorld’s senior editor, Mark focuses on Microsoft news and chip technology, among other beats. He has formerly written for PCMag, BYTE, Slashdot, eWEEK, and ReadWrite.
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