Windows 7 SP1 Hits Automatic Installation Milestone

If you still haven't installed SP1, you've been asleep at the switch

Starting tomorrow, March 19, Windows 7 Service Pack 1 (SP1) will begin rolling out automatically to individuals via Windows Update. Not coincidentally, this change comes just weeks ahead of the end of mainstream support for the original, or RTM, version of Windows 7.

“Updating customers to Windows 7 SP1 is part of our ongoing effort to ensure continued support and improved security updates for customers who have not yet installed SP1,” a Microsoft representative noted. “Windows 7 SP1 was previously available on Windows Update but required user action to install.  Starting tomorrow, the installation will be fully automatic with no user action required for those who already have Automatic Update enabled.”

Windows 7 Service Pack 1 was released in February 2011, over two years ago.

Microsoft announced the change in a blog post noting that it only impacts PCs used by individuals. If you’re running Windows 7 in an environment managed by Systems Center Configuration Manager (SCCM), WSUS, or similar, you will still have full control over the release of SP1. Nothing has changed.

If you’re interested in the gory details, you can view the Windows 7 page on the Microsoft Support Lifecycle site. But what it boils down to is that mainstream support for the original, RTM (“release to manufacturing”) version of Windows 7 expires on April 9, 2013.

Mainstream support for Windows 7 with Service Pack 1 (SP1), to date the only service pack that Microsoft has released and plans to release for this system, ends “24 months after the next service pack releases or at the end of the product's support lifecycle, whichever comes first.” Assuming the latter, that would be January 13, 2015, though extended support will be provided through January 14, 2020, and will presumably be honored by our future robot overlords.

Discuss this Article 4

ps30075
on Mar 19, 2013

I'm curious if there's even one business anywhere that has purposely kept SP1 off their users' PCs. If so, I'd love to hear the reason. I just can't imagine some app incompatibility this far out. It ain't Java...

Too bad Oracle doesn't force upgrades to Java on developers. Though they're supposedly done with 1.6 after this last emergency release, there is still stuff out there that quite simply demands it and won't work with 1.7. Our payroll processor is one, Cisco's UCS hardware is another... ugh.

Straatkat
on Mar 19, 2013

Why wait two years? Why is this not happening 6 months or 6 weeks after availability?

LemonSaucy
on Mar 19, 2013

Well, it makes sense. Some people installed Windows 7 RTM and don't necessarily need or want SP1, for whatever reason. Now that Microsoft doesn't want to support Windows 7 RTM, it makes sense to be a bit more aggressive by distributing the service pack via Windows Update.

IMHO, if they (the Microsoft people) really wanted to serve their customers instead of just manipulate them, they might have just rolled SP1, subsequent updates to it, MSE (as an option), and IE 10 into a Service Pack 2 and then sent that to Windows Update (and to Windows manufacturing) to be distributed instead.

But that would make sense and that's something the Microsoft bunch haven't been show much of as of some time since Windows 8 was in beta.

yuhong
on May 8, 2013

MS have never put things like IE upgrades into Service Packs.

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