Although we have not heard much from Microsoft regarding Windows 10 22H2, we do know for a fact that the company will release an update for this old operating system.
After all, Redmond has promised to keep supporting Windows 10 until late 2025, at least.
This means that users can expect more feature updates for the OS to arrive in the near and distant future. Whether these updates deserve to be labelled as feature updates or not, given their lack of new additions, is another story entirely.
Anyway, one such feature update is about to take flight soon in the form of Windows 10 version 22H2.
As confirmed, the latest optional updates released for the old OS have enabled this major new version.
It's expected that Windows 10 22H2 will be based on the good old 19041…
Try it at home: https://t.co/spJJXPJxBZ pic.twitter.com/rWoxnfnuCT— 桃花 (@he45076932) June 24, 2022
This feature update is based on the now familiar build 19045 of Windows 10, which is another hint that it will not bring anything major in terms of new additions. In fact, by the looks of things, version 22H2 may not bring any consumer-facing capabilities at all to Windows 10.
The point is this new version is simply an enablement package that does not add any new features.
Action has very much shifted to Windows 11, where version 22H2 is the talk of the town these days. The upcoming Sun Valley 3 release of the operating system promises a range of new features and options for the current OS.
Those who download KB5014666 on their device can activate version 22H2 on their system by entering some commands in the Command Prompt as an Administrator. This will force-enable the latest operating system on their PC.
For regular consumers, though, enabling the next update before Microsoft officially releases it makes no sense.
This is just a confirmation that Redmond still cares about Windows 10, enough to keep it refreshed.