Or in news just out yesterday and starngely not covered at Tom's (unless I missed it) , you can get an extra year of coverage free
End-of-support date isn’t changing, but extra year will be functionally free.
arstechnica.com
After thinking about this, (I saw this article elsewhere as well yesterday)
MS is testing the waters with a paid service, what better place to start.
Microsoft moving Windows toward a paid service model isn't a shock, it's just the next step in a long, deliberate transition. We've seen this playbook before. Office became Microsoft 365. Xbox went all in on Game Pass. Now it's Windows' turn.
This shift isn't about innovation or offering something better. It's about securing recurring revenue and locking users deeper into the Microsoft ecosystem. The signs have been there for a while, pushing Microsoft accounts, integrating cloud services you didn’t ask for, sneaking ads into the Start Menu and lock screen, and stripping out options like local accounts unless you know where to dig. It's all been leading to this...... you will rent your OS.
And don’t think this will come with major perks. A subscription based Windows doesn’t mean faster updates, more stability, or better features. It means you’ll pay every month just to keep what you already had. The quality of the OS won't magically improve, but the telemetry, the ads, and the “premium unlocks” will definitely ramp up.
For enterprise and IT departments, this won't be a hard sell. They're already paying for Microsoft 365, and Microsoft knows it. They’ll market this as a more secure, manageable platform. But regular users will get the short end of the stick. Once you're in the ecosystem, your choices get narrower, and more expensive.
Give it a version or two, and we’ll probably start seeing "Windows Basic" vs. "Windows Premium Cloud" tiers.
At the end of the day, this isn't about giving users value, it's about squeezing long term revenue from an OS that millions used to get as a one time cost. Microsoft isn’t selling software anymore. They're selling access. And once they’ve got enough people on the hook, you’ll never really own your PC again.
Question is, how many people fall for it?
Well, just like Apple, there’s always going to be a group that won’t use anything but Windows........no matter how bad the deal gets.
Anyone want to rent a PC?