![]() ![]() If your PC is ready for the update, it’ll appear – but bear in mind that only some hardware configurations will be eligible to upgrade, and this is a gradual (possibly very cautious) rollout as mentioned, so you may have to wait a while anyway. To do this, go to ‘Windows Update settings’ (simply search for that in the Windows 10 search box on the taskbar) and click ‘Check for updates’. If you do want the Windows 10 21H1 update on your machine right now, you’ll have to be running version 2004 of the OS (20H1 or May 2020 Update) or 20H2 ( October 2020 Update) – either of last year’s upgrades, in other words – and you’ll need to manually search for the May 2021 Update. There are also improvements to Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) Group Policy Service (in remote working scenarios in particular) and a bunch of security updates. ![]() The small feature additions we mentioned at the outset include Windows Hello getting multi-camera support, and some bolstering on the security front with performance improvements for Windows Defender Application Guard. That would make sense, particularly as there is nothing hugely compelling to get with the Windows Update. ![]() However, the way it’s phrased here – the ‘current environment’ of working from home in many cases, and therefore the PC being a vital tool to keep up and running flawlessly – makes us think that it sounds like Microsoft could be going for an extra cautious opening of the update floodgates. ![]()
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