The new hub's layout is an improvement over the earlier dashboard as it focused attention on specific Windows 10 versions, which is likely how most customers will approach the site. In February 2019, Microsoft implied that no cues would be given in the future, only to turn around a month later to say it would " continue to communicate for future releases the transition from targeted to broad deployment status."Īlso this month, Microsoft retired its Windows release health dashboard, a website launched in 2019, and replaced it with a revamped and renamed "Windows release health hub." That is clearly what Microsoft would like to do, as evidenced both by its current sluggishness and a back-and-forth two years ago. If that's the case, it would be best if Microsoft simply discontinued the practice. As Computerworld has argued before, it may be that Microsoft, although still tied to the habit of endorsing an upgrade's righteousness, decided most commercial customers no longer need the hand-holding these notifications represented.
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