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    Anasayfa » Windows 11 SE is dead: Microsoft pulls plug on school-focused OS
    Windows

    Windows 11 SE is dead: Microsoft pulls plug on school-focused OS

    By ayaksızAğustos 2, 2025Yorum yapılmamış3 Mins Read
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    Microsoft is bringing Windows 11 SE to a quiet but definitive close, marking the end of a short-lived experiment aimed at capturing the K-12 education market from Google’s Chromebooks. In a recently revised support document discovered by German tech outlet Dr. Windows, Microsoft confirmed that the upcoming version 24H2 will be the final feature update for Windows 11 SE. After that, the company plans to halt all technical support, feature improvements, and security updates by October 2026 — a date that now aligns with the revised end-of-life schedule for Windows 10. This signals a broader strategic shift at Microsoft as it retires underperforming legacy platforms and focuses on consolidating its development resources around more mainstream versions of Windows 11.

    Originally unveiled in late 2021 and rolled out to schools in early 2022, Windows 11 SE was billed as a “distraction-free” variant of Windows designed specifically for educational environments. Built to run on low-cost laptops with modest hardware, the OS was intentionally stripped of many standard features. Students were blocked from installing traditional Win32 apps or even certain Windows Store apps without administrator approval. Widgets were removed, Snap Layouts were simplified, and the interface heavily favored Microsoft’s own software offerings — especially Edge and Office 365. Device management was tied to Microsoft’s Intune for Education system, making centralized control easier for IT admins but also adding a layer of complexity for schools not already embedded in the Microsoft ecosystem.

    Despite the targeted features, Windows 11 SE struggled to gain meaningful traction. Chromebooks had already taken firm root in U.S. schools and were expanding rapidly in other regions, thanks to their affordable price points, fast boot times, and seamless integration with Google Workspace. Meanwhile, many school administrators who had experience with full Windows installations were reluctant to adopt a system that limited functionality and required new training and support infrastructure. Windows 11 SE’s heavy-handed approach — echoing the failed Windows 10 S initiative — proved too restrictive for many educators and students alike.

    Adding to the confusion is the short timeline before the OS becomes obsolete. While Microsoft technically gives users until 2026, the final major update arrives this year, effectively giving schools less than 15 months to plan device refreshes and transition students to supported platforms. This limited window might present a challenge, particularly for underfunded districts that had invested in SE-compatible laptops thinking they would be viable for years. Although Microsoft continues to promote its more robust Windows 11 for Education offering, the abrupt phase-out of SE raises questions about its long-term education strategy and internal resource priorities — especially in light of recent staffing cuts across the company. For now, the move underscores a hard truth: Microsoft’s attempts to out-Chromebook the Chromebook have, once again, fallen short.

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