this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2023
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Do you know where can I find a download for LSTC 2021? Do you know if it's available to purchase a key through the windows store or something like that? I did some googling but all I found was possible ways of getting volume keys for enterprise usage.. Which I mean is kind of what it's for, but I would like to try it for myself.
Apparently its only sold to companies, there is no way to purchase it legally as a private os...
Yeah, I can give you a download link. PM me on Monday (tomorrow), I have the ISO's at work, not home.
You can't purchase a key, LTSB/LTSC editions are meant for coprosations only. You'd have to be a private entity in order to buy a license and they're through the roof expensive. Just use KMS38 on the install, it'll activate it permanently (till 2038, but that's almost permanently, considering LTSC 2019 is supported till 2029).
Ever since 10 came out, corps and enterprises didn't like the point release model because that often breaks things. They wanted something feature fixed that did the job, like Win7 was. MS enduldged this wish (seing as how corps and ents are one of their biggest customers regarding Windows) and made Windows 10 Enterprise LTSB 2016 (Long Term Service Branch). In 2019, they released Win 10 LTSC 2019 (changed the acronym to Long Term Service Channel). Both LTSB 2016 and LTSC 2019 have a 10 year support cycle - they get security fixes and crucial updates in the next 10 years. In 2021, Win10 LTSC 2021 was released, but the support cycles was reduced to only 5 years (for this and other future LTSC releases), meaning both LTSB 2016 and 2019 currently have a higher life span than LTSC 2021.
The LTSC releases are not that different from regular Windows releases. They're basically like Windows 7 releases, fixed in features. The other big plus is that they come with no apps and no way to actually install apps whatsoever (MS store missing completely, corps don't actually need that, they need for the installs to do one, two jobs perfectly, and that's it). They have a higher price tag because they're basically what server versions of Windows look like (and they coniside with the server releases as well), but have no server manager and are marked as workstations.
Simply put, you get a workstation OS with no apps, frozen in time, only security updates, nothing more. It was how their previous release model used to look like, before Windows 10, which is why LTSC releases are appealing to certain types of crowds, including myself (all my Windows installs sre LTSC).