But, with updates automatically installed whether you want them or not, a buggy update could cause problems on many home computers and there'd be no avoiding it. Microsoft will have to improve the quality of Windows updates. Telling business users that changes will be tested on home PCs before they're made available is a little worrying, with home users forced to pay more for a Windows 10 Professional upgrade if they want those stable, business-grade updates.
And, if Windows 10 truly is the last big version of Windows, this means you won't be able to avoid any dramatic interface changes you don't like. If Microsoft's Windows team decides to go off the deep end again and brings in the kind of dramatic, unwelcome changes we saw with Windows 8, there will be no way to cling to the original interface offered in Windows 10 — not unless you're using the enterprise version of Windows.