News

Reports: Next Windows 8.1 Update Possible in Fall

The deadline to install Windows 8.1 Update 1 has been extended as well.

The first update to Windows 8.1 is barely out the door, but Microsoft is already planning the next update for this fall, according to media reports.

Windows 8.1 Update was announced at Build, the Microsoft developer conference, earlier this month. The rumor of the update to that release comes from an unknown Web source known as "WZor," but it was substantiated to a degree by the unnamed sources that talk to veteran Microsoft reporter Mary Jo Foley. She reported that a second update may arrive in August, according to her sources. WZor suggests that the update will arrive in September.

Microsoft hasn't described a second update as yet, although it did show Start Menu concept art for its next Windows client release at its Build developer event. That concept art was supposed to suggest what it planned to release in the near future, according to an explanation from Microsoft. Foley said that a new Start Menu is a possible addition to the rumored second update, but she had few details to offer about what features might arrive.

It's not clear what the rumored second update will be called. Foley speculated it could be called "Update 2" or maybe "Windows 8.2."

Wes Miller, an analyst with independent consultancy Directions on Microsoft, speculated that the new update would arrive before the fall holiday season.

"I do still believe we'll see a Windows 8.1 Update 2 (or Windows 8.2), likely with availability in the October timeframe (there's always confusion about when it will be done versus when it will be available)," Miller said, via e-mail. "It'll likely be done in August or September, but not really in the wild until October, in time for the holiday."

Microsoft's accelerated software release pace hasn't been well characterized by the company, although it has suggested that it is issuing annual releases now -- a cycle that many IT organizations may be hard-pressed to meet. Miller still hears it as annual release cycles. In the case of Windows 8, though, the update releases seem to be arriving every six months or so.

To a certain degree, Microsoft seems to be making up its software release schedule as it goes. It originally released Windows 8.1 Update with a 30-day deadline to install it. Organizations failing to do so would not get future updates, Microsoft had warned. However, a week later, Microsoft relaxed that deadline to 120 days. The reprieve came after Microsoft talked with some of its enterprise customers, Microsoft explained.

Organizations now have until Aug. 12 to install the update for Windows 8.1, Windows Server 2012 R2 or Windows Embedded 8.1 Industry or risk losing future update support for those operating systems.

Miller hasn't heard any better clarification from Microsoft about its release cycle plans, but its effects on IT organizations is apparent from customer discussions.

"There's also a fair bit of concern across customers we talk with about the level of testing that patches (not just Windows 8.1 Update, but it too) are receiving before release," he stated. "The lack of a public beta cycle may give Microsoft more flexibility internally, and allow better control over the PR and marketing message, but in a world comprised of heterogeneous software and systems, it doesn't allow for adequate time for test coverage before organizations have to start deploying (and sometimes unwinding or re-deploying) patches."

Directions on Microsoft will be hosting a public Windows Roadmap Update Webinar on Thursday, at 10 a.m. Pacific Time. Registration is available at this page.

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • See Prompts Microsoft Engineers Use for Bleeding-Edge Multimodal RAG AI Research

    Vision-centric queries show how front-line experts are prompting LLMs these days.

  • AI Explains Expressions in Update to Java on VS Code

    "The Spring Tools now show code lenses above these expressions that allow you to quickly let GitHub Copilot explain those statements for you."

  • Microsoft Eases Integration with Semantic Kernel AI SDK

    The basic idea is to provide unified API abstractions, especially for idiomatic C# code, to help platform developers and others work with any provider with standard implementations for caching, telemetry, tool calling and other common tasks.

  • Final .NET 9 Preview Ships with Go-Live License

    Visual Studio developers can now download the SDK for .NET 9 Release Candidate 2 with a go-live license, meaning devs get Microsoft support for production applications even before the framework reaches general availability next month.

Subscribe on YouTube