

But it also dashed enthusiasm for a release channel that Microsoft had been reluctant to offer to begin with and had downplayed since.

Microsoft's reason for changing LTSC's support policy was purportedly to ensure that customers would be able to take advantage of each new processor generation's benefits. The new rules meant customers running Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC would be forced into upgrading to each release as they bought new PCs powered by new generations of silicon. As future silicon generations are released, support will be created through future Windows 10 LTSC releases that customers can deploy for those systems." Much of that was made moot, however, two years ago when Microsoft trashed LTSC's value by declaring each version would "support the currently released silicon at the time of release of the LTSC.

Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2019, for instance, is to be supported until Jan. LTSC support was even divided into the two five-year phases, Mainstream and Extended, that have been foundational to Windows and other Microsoft software. The long-term version was originally presented as unchanging code that would be supported for 10 years, like Windows 7, rather than the 18- or 30-months of other Windows 10 SKUs (stock-keeping units). Enterprises wanted the ability to stick with the long-traditional cadence, where a new OS appeared about every three years, with security fixes between each major upgrade. Microsoft conceded the need for LTSC when corporate customers pushed back against the accelerated tempo of Windows 10's updates.

Instead, LTSC receives security updates only. LTSC - formerly labeled LTSB for "Long-Term Servicing Build" before Microsoft changed its update nomenclature - forgoes the twice-yearly upgrades that add new features and modify the user interface (UI). Microsoft has persistently said that it would release a new LTSC edition every two to three years, even if its behavior didn't necessarily follow that timetable. Microsoft issued the debut LTSC in July 2015, the second 13 months later and the third 27 months after that. The three-year gap between the current and future LTSC will be the longest yet for Windows 10's most constant edition. LTSC 2019 was based on Windows 10 Enterprise 1809, the four-digit yymm-formatted moniker of last year's fall feature upgrade. "The next LTSC release can be expected toward the end of 2021," Joe Lurie, a senior product marketing manager, wrote in a May 21 post to a company blog.Īt the moment, the latest version is Windows 10 Enterprise LSTC 2019, which Microsoft launched in November 2018. Microsoft won't issue another Windows 10 "Long-term Servicing Channel" (LTSC) build until 2021, the company quietly said a week ago.
