support discontinuation

Winsage
July 12, 2026
Microsoft will discontinue support for several products in 2026, including: 1. Windows 11 24H2 (Home and Pro) - End of servicing on October 13, 2026. 2. Office 2021 and Office LTSC 2021 - End of support on October 13, 2026. 3. Windows Server 2012 and 2012 R2 - Final ESU year ending on October 13, 2026. 4. SQL Server 2016 - Extended end of support on July 14, 2026. 5. SharePoint Server 2016 and 2019, Project Server 2016 and 2019 - Support ends on July 14, 2026. 6. Microsoft Publisher - Retired after October 2026. 7. Exchange Server 2016 and 2019, Skype for Business Server - Final ESU cutoff on October 31, 2026. 8. Windows 11 Enterprise and Education 23H2, .NET 8, .NET 9, PowerShell 7.4 - End of servicing on November 10, 2026. 9. Windows 10 2016 LTSB and IoT Enterprise LTSB 2016 - Extended support ends on October 13, 2026. 10. Windows 11 SE - Support ends on October 1, 2026. 11. Dynamics CRM 2016 and older versions - Lost support earlier in January 2026. 12. Microsoft Configuration Manager, version 2409 - End of support on June 6, 2026. 13. Visual Studio 2022 LTSC channels, versions 17.10 and 17.12 - End of support in January and July 2026, respectively. 14. InfoPath 2013, SharePoint Designer 2013 - End of support on July 14, 2026. 15. Azure service retirements - Occurring in late 2026. Organizations are advised to review their software landscape and plan for transitions to avoid disruptions.
Winsage
October 11, 2025
Microsoft will cease support for Windows 10 on October 14, 2025, ending free security patches, bug fixes, and feature updates. While PCs will continue to function normally after this date, users will be exposed to potential security vulnerabilities without ongoing updates. Options for maintaining security include enrolling in the Extended Security Update program, checking hardware compatibility for Windows 11, or forcing the Windows 11 update on unsupported hardware. Additionally, Steam plans to phase out support for 32-bit Windows 10 by January 1, 2026, but most gamers use 64-bit systems. EA has not announced plans to withdraw support for its EA app on Windows 10.
AppWizard
October 1, 2025
Capcom has announced it will cease support for Windows 10 for several titles in the Monster Hunter franchise, effective October 14th. This affects games such as Monster Hunter: World, Monster Hunter Rise, and Monster Hunter Wilds. While these games will continue to function on Windows 10 for now, Capcom cannot guarantee their compatibility with future updates. Assistance for issues encountered after the support discontinuation will be limited, and services for diagnosing problems on Windows 10 will also be phased out. This decision aligns with Valve's plan to discontinue support for the 32-bit version of Windows 10 by 2026.
Winsage
August 10, 2025
Lawrence Klein, a San Diego resident, has filed a lawsuit against Microsoft challenging the company's decision to discontinue support for Windows 10 in October. Klein argues that Microsoft should maintain free support for Windows 10 until its user base falls below 10% of all Windows users, claiming the discontinuation pressures users to purchase new devices and helps Microsoft establish a monopoly in the generative AI market. As of April 2025, Windows 10 users make up approximately 52.94% of all Windows users, while Windows 11 adoption has been slow. Klein estimates that over 240 million devices may become obsolete due to Windows 11's hardware requirements, leading to increased e-waste. He criticizes Microsoft's strategy as atypical, noting that the transition to Windows 11 is being mandated only four years after its release, and he describes Windows 11 as "wildly unpopular." Klein seeks judicial intervention to stop misleading advertising, ensure clear communication about support discontinuation, and mandate continued updates for Windows 10 at no extra cost until its user base declines significantly. Klein is only requesting reimbursement for attorney's fees.
Winsage
September 20, 2024
Support for older versions of Windows (7, 8, 8.1) and macOS (10.14 or earlier) in the open-source email client Thunderbird will officially end next month with the release of Thunderbird 115.15.0, which is the last major update for these systems. Thunderbird ESR 128 will also no longer function on these platforms. The latest version of Thunderbird, version 128, will only support Windows 10 and 11, macOS 10.15 and newer, and Linux. Mozilla has extended support for Firefox on older operating systems, but Thunderbird users will not receive this extension due to lower usage statistics, resource constraints, and the end of support by Microsoft for these operating systems. Approximately 600,000 Thunderbird users will be affected by this decision. After support ends, Thunderbird will still operate, but users will not receive updates or security patches. Alternatives for accessing email include web interfaces and limited email clients like Postbox and MailSpring, which support Windows 8 and 7, respectively.
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