Yes, as has pointed out several times now, that is how MS do it. So 18362.1 will be the RTM release, unless disaster strikes.
@Enthousiast yes yes i just thinking this is good sign for final build. But i hope in the end Redmond to compile new ISO with all CU.
How many times do we have to explain that that will never happen, if a baseline iso (first officially released ISO) contains already preintegrated updates, it's useless for developers or oems, for example, you can't integrate LP's into them without having to re-integrate the CU (same for other on demand packages that need CU to be updated).
Clean installed few weeks ago with 18353 and then updated to 18362.1 -> 30 w/o issues. I read 18362.53 is causing laggy FPS in games and most apps, .Net failing etc.. Good thing it didn't install. Typical MSFT.
Yes, but after updating the OS via CU the entire thing becomes 18362.53, am I correct? Very good option for capturing it in a wim file for a stock and very barebone OS.
I love the same old conversations about 16299 & 16299.xx build every twice in a year when the next version of Windows QU is about to release
Most problems are caused by modifications made by the complainer or very specific conditions, i don't game, so i can't comment on that. The barebone OS would be 18362.1 without any updates in.
Is the native .net4 edition of 18362. https://forums.mydigitallife.net/threads/windows-10-hotfix-repository.57050/page-388#post-1515194
General public still use Windows for gaming. Yeah you're correct, 18362.1 is the stock or clean 19H1 build.