Friday, April 10th 2020
Windows 10 2004 Could Come Out in May
Microsoft could release the next major update to Windows 10, aka 2004, in May as the Windows 10 May 2020 Update (build 19041.173). Codenamed "Manganese," Windows 10 2004 has been released to Windows Insiders (slow ring), who can now either update their current installations or get ISO files for the new operating system. For the rest of us, Microsoft could release the software some time in May. Windows 10 2004 introduces a "restore this PC from the cloud" option, refined Windows Update management system; a more functional Task Manager that can show GPU temperatures; improvements to Cortana, Windows Search, and Network management.
Sources:
Bleeping Computer, WCCFTech
75 Comments on Windows 10 2004 Could Come Out in May
I don't overclock so I've never really felt the need to watch CPU or GPU temp.
I know the latest nvidia drivers support that, unsure on AMD (I've been on the oldish Radeon Pro drivers for like, forever).
As for the task manager, i use classic task manager. Cortana i have disable lol. I actually use classic windows 7 apps on windows 10 anyway. Windows 10 is a great OS, but alot of their stuff , well I'm just thankful there's alot of "restore classic apps similar to windows 7". If not, i would never use Windows 10.
Though to be honest, I'd rather Microsoft go back to actual, comprehensive and not-half-assed OS releases, like XP and 7, where they cannot rely on just pushing out multiple tiny updates, including updates to fix a flaw from a previous mini update, and actually have to check it thoroughly enough before they can push it out as part of a Service Pack or Important Update.
They can leave the programs-as-a-service to their office suite and as a cheap, basic option for non-power users (also conveniently using them as live beta testing before rolling out proper, total fixes to the higher tier versions of the OS).
It proberly updated the IE or so and it resetted alot of settings back to it's original, but come'on, an update is supposed to either secure or improve your computer, not have it lose data or re-run the complete list of changes i've done before.
You're using some kind of enforced local account?
Concent is pretty well separated from the OS as well. No OS update should overwrite anything.
Honestly, I got so used to cloud-backed accounts (in OS, browsers, software, gaming) that I almost forgot the kind of problems you're talking about. I reset my Windows (full file wipeout) at least once a year, login into a few apps and everything gets back to how I left it.
Oh and how about adding an SSD cache and deferred writes. SSD cache, which would place a copy of frequently used files from slower HDDs onto the SSD cache (especially useful for games). Deferred writes, which would use system memory / SSD to accelerate write operations.
Will it provide fixes for performance / Windows scheduler?
And will TechPowerUp update its test review configuration?
Why don't they move on to the Fast Ring and test with the latest build ever created?
Edit: Windows might be called Windows 365 when it moves to a subscription model.
Windows 10 uses it from the start (1507). MS Office 365 uses it as well.
Ubuntu adds a dot between year and month, i.e. 18.04.
There are some less popular examples as well. Well, I know people who had "legitimate reasons" not to use Internet from home even in the mid 2000s. I lost contact, so can't say if they changed their minds eventually.
Obviously this is not a topic to discuss such motives. So let's leave it there.
What I said is: if someone isn't afraid of the cloud, this is not a problem anymore. Yes, Windows 10 was planned as the last "big launch". They've said that openly:
www.theverge.com/2015/5/7/8568473/windows-10-last-version-of-windows
There's really no reason to change the integer, background and icons every few years.
Windows 10 2004 will be vastly different to 1507 in both visuals and backend.
Few years from now it may be a full linux underneath and most people won't even notice.