The free version will come as an update rather than a standalone ISO.
The free version will come as an update rather than a standalone ISO.
It isn't just one change; many sections of the operating system were completely rewritten for this update.
This would count as an operating system upgrade, not a simple update... updates are the installations you perform through the control panel each Tuesday
It could also be updated via Windows Update, similar to what you can do on Windows 7 to try out Windows 10... Once that’s done, if you prefer a fresh start, perform a system refresh in Windows 10, which essentially wipes and rebuilds the main drive. I do this each time a new version of Windows 10 is released—I install the latest via Windows Update (on win10), it sets up automatically, and then I restore everything to its original state while choosing the option to delete all files.