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Tuesday, March 17, 2020

One billion devices now use Windows 10


Microsoft finally succeeded in achieving the goal it set for Windows 10. Two years later.

Windows 10 has been the ruler of the market for several years. But it was only the forced retirement of Windows 7 support that helped the Microsoft team achieve the result they had set out back in 2015 upon launching this system.

Then they said that the OS would be installed on one billion devices worldwide in some two to three years. It has been downplayed by the mobile version fiasco, but now it's official - with a 20-month delay, Windows 10 is now installed on more than a billion devices.

This applies to different types of devices, from PCs, Xbox consoles, augmented reality devices and VR, and Surface tablets. The latest release of the operating system is called Windows 10X and is designed to work on computers with two separate screens.

While some have objections to specific segments of the Microsoft platform, it is clear that Windows 10 will continue to be the dominant gaming platform on PC in the future. Microsoft's idea was to create a system that would be upgraded for years without having to develop Windows 11, and looking back over the last five years, they have been constantly changing and upgrading the system in various aspects, including for players. Game Boost mode, HDR support were added, the Xbox app changed several times, and raytracing support was added as part of the DirectX 12 API.

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