Eski bir web tarayıcısı kullanıyorsunuz. Bu veya diğer siteleri görüntülemekte sorunlar yaşayabilirsiniz.. Tarayıcınızı güncellemeli veya alternatif bir tarayıcı kullanmalısınız.
Quite sure Microsoft said a while ago that Windows 10 is the last Windows and will just get updates/feature updates instead of an entirely new Windows.
Where before a major upgrade would be released every few years and then patches would be released every month in the interim (with occasional minor feature additions), the model now is one of incremental change.
While patches are still released every month, Microsoft releases a “feature update” every 6 months or so. These feature updates include functionality changes and, in some cases, UI enhancements. Because the release cycle is every six months rather than every three years (approximately), the changes are gradual.
Each feature update is slightly different than the previous one. There's not a lot of change between releases. If you've kept up with the updates (which you would have if your computer is network-connected, because Microsoft forces you to), it probably seems like the same old Windows 10. But, if you compare the most recent feature release — known as version 1809, in October 2018 — and compare it with the initial public release — version 1507, in 2015 — the UI differences are notable.
I expect that a future feature release will make major changes to the operating system. But such a chang won't be billed as a “new” Windows; it will be pushed out as a feature update just like the Creator's Update in April 2017.
We may reach a point where Microsoft will stop servicing systems that have no Microsoft licenses purchased other than the static Windows 10 license. They may move to an “Operating System as a Service” model whereby you will need to maintain a current paid license to continue receiving patches and feature updates.
I doubt it, though. Microsoft is pushing their other cloud-based SaaS services: Office 365 for desktop and Azure for the server. If they can capture a large market share for paid subscriptions to Office 365, they can include the cost of the OS in the cost of the software — and the subscription model ensures a continuous revenue stream from each customer, which perpetual licenses do not.
The continuous update model of the OS is necessary to support the continuous update model of the subscription-based Office 365. So that's why OS updates are “free.”