I manage my updates through WSUS, but not everyone has the drive, ability or desire to run a home lab. I do it to keep me going in my career, though more so I still have tech work to do since I manage teams of engineers rather than being an engineer these days. WSUS + some solid powershell scripting to manage it FTW.
I'm on almost all 10 in my home and work environment, sprinkle in a couple 7 & 8.1 VM's, and a handful of Linux boxes and VM's. But for primary, 10's been solid for me overall. I'll keep on keeping on after 1/14, with the goal of helping my clients move on from 7. Even at the MSP I work for, we're supporting 7 under managed services for at least a year past the MS EOL date. It really depends on third party security support and what exploits come about after EOL hits that will signal when we can't justify managing it or need to raise rates to compensate for labor invested to keep the old OS running, secure and stable.
When you start to see stuff like MBAM, WRSA, Avast, etc. start to drop support for 7, it's time to move on, past time in reality, but for those hanging on for whatever reason. That or run a virtual 7 if you need it for specific software if possible, Hyper-V is fine without hardware passthrough and is on all Windows Pro OSes since Windows 8 at or near the same capabilities as their Windows Server relatives.
Frankly my personal combo is Windows 10 1809 + Ubuntu Bionic Beaver, I'm pretty content with it overall.
Curious to know how much that will be.
$50 for year 1, $100 for year 2, $200 for year 3. It's aimed at enterprise/business environments where moving from Windows 7 is truly detrimental to their operations and appears to be primarily offered to Windows Enterprise clients. We have several that are mulling this route, because their third party software devs still don't support 8 or 10, or Linux. When your business or industry operates on something so limited, you have no choice if nobody else offers a competing solution and you don't want to develop it on your own.
Source:
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/201...urity-updates-will-double-in-price-each-year/