Microsoft Windows
IN PHOTO: Microsoft Corp's Ashley Frank talks about Windows 10 at the annual shareholders' meeting in Bellevue, Washington December 3, 2014. Reuters/Jason Redmond

During the Windows Hardware Engineering Community (WinHEC) conference that was held in the previous month, the Redmond based firm had announced that the Windows 10 will be available in 111 languages across 190 countries. However, when it came to Windows 10 release date, the company only mentioned that it would arrive in summer. Fresh information reveals that it is slated for a release at the end of July

According to The Verge, the July month Windows 10 release date news has cropped up because of a slip-up from Lisa T. Su, the CEO of AMD. While talking during the previous week’s financial earning conference call, she mentioned that the Microsoft is aiming to release the Windows 10 to the market before the start of the back-to-school promotions.

PC World claims that since AMD is a major processor and GPU manufacturer, it may be aware of the Microsoft’s plan well in advance. The Windows 10 builds that have been released so far are still ridden with plenty of issues that need to be resolved before it is made available for public use in July end.

The Redmond giant will be holding the Microsoft Build Developer Conference in the coming week on April 29 that will last until May 1. The company is expected to reveal more information on Windows 10 launch plans during the upcoming event.

Windows 10 is expected to a better operating system than the older Windows 8. It will come with the much loved Start Menu, Corana voice assistant integration, new Project Spartan internet browser and many more features. If the slip-up from the AMD CEO is correct, the Windows 10 release date is only three months away.

Windows 10 will be available as a free upgrade at least one year for users who already using Windows 7, Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8 claims Win Beta. What do you think about the previous builds of Windows 10 and Windows 10 for phone released so far? Do they appear promising? Do let us know your experience with Windows 10 by adding your comments.

To report problems or leave feedback about this article, email: a.sivanandan@ibtimes.com.au