With support being ceased as of June 2020, Microsoft will no longer be shipping Windows 7 Pro and Home to most, if not all, of its licensed vendors. Although Windows 7 has proven to be Microsoft’s most popular, and stable, O/S (Operating System), the time has come for them to close up shop on Windows 7 and put it’s full forces to work to promote Windows 10.
Windows 10, being a hybrid of O/S’s between Windows 7, 8 and 8.1, it features the Menu bar similar to that of Win 7 (lost in Windows 8/8.1) and the much-desired touch screen operation of Windows 8/8.1 and the generation of smart phones and tablets. Considering the extensive driver list, true plug-and-play operation and the overall stability of the latest iteration of Windows 10, I have found it to be an extremely user-friendly and robust O/S, capable of running almost any application created this century, with the almost seamless network connectivity of both wired and wireless networks and Internet access.