Windows 10: Less than 100 MB for the October 2020 Update
In recent days, distribution to Insiders in the Release Preview Channel of the preview version of the 20H2 update for Windows 10 has begun. Final name confirmed: October 2020 Update. The distribution in its final form is therefore expected for next month.
It will therefore be more of a service pack, even if some new features will be included: from the new Start menu shown in the gallery of images below (on these pages a short tutorial to get it right away) to the advanced management of the Alt + Tab command. Again, in the 20H2 of Windows 10 the Chromium edition of the Edge browser for navigation will be pre-installed.
The hope is that Microsoft has packed a bug-free update, unlike what has unfortunately been seen several times in the recent past . A situation that has put and is putting a strain on users' patience.
As anticipated at the beginning of September it is likely that starting from 2021 the software house will be able to choose to publish only one major update to the year. Doing so should be able to simplify the management of the process, even if the innovations put in place (Windows 10X above all) could add a new workload for the team working on the operating system.
Source: Windows Latest
Windows 10 20H2: the October 2020 Update package
As already written several times it will not be a full-bodied package: it will weigh less than 100 MB according to the first reports collected. For those who have not installed the latest cumulative updates it will go beyond 400 MB.It will therefore be more of a service pack, even if some new features will be included: from the new Start menu shown in the gallery of images below (on these pages a short tutorial to get it right away) to the advanced management of the Alt + Tab command. Again, in the 20H2 of Windows 10 the Chromium edition of the Edge browser for navigation will be pre-installed.
The hope is that Microsoft has packed a bug-free update, unlike what has unfortunately been seen several times in the recent past . A situation that has put and is putting a strain on users' patience.
As anticipated at the beginning of September it is likely that starting from 2021 the software house will be able to choose to publish only one major update to the year. Doing so should be able to simplify the management of the process, even if the innovations put in place (Windows 10X above all) could add a new workload for the team working on the operating system.
Source: Windows Latest