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Windows 10 version 1703 for Enterprise and Education is reaching end of life, and you can't pay for patches either.
Today is the day that all support ends for the Windows 10 Creators Update, also known as version 1703, along with the Windows 10 Mobile Anniversary Update, also known as version 1607.
Windows 10 version 1703 got its final update today, making it the second version of the operating system ever to reach the end of support, after 1511 support expired last year in April.
A batch of small cumulative updates is rolling out to older versions of Windows 10 with fixes in tow.
With Version 1703 of Windows 10 servicing ending on October 9, 2018, Microsoft has decided to remind users visiting the Microsoft Store that it's time to "Update your PC by October 9, 2018. Join ...
Microsoft added quality improvements to the servicing stack for Windows 10 version 1703, the component designed to install Windows updates. In this update's description, Microsoft also recommends ...
The three cumulative updates bring a host of fixes to builds 1607 (Windows 10 Anniversary Edition, or Redstone 1), 1703 (Windows 10 Creators Update, or Redstone 2), and 1709 (Windows 10 Fall ...
Microsoft is trumpeting Windows 10 Creators Update as the best and most reliable version of the operating system for business.
For the third time in the past four months, Microsoft 'accidentally' upgraded Windows 10 1703 machines to version 1709 in spite of explicit, correctly applied, deferral settings.
Windows Updates getting even more complex, a little more controllable With the Creators Update, Microsoft is adding non-security updates into the mix.