This is the normal cycle of tech news repeating something boring with each repeat making it sound ever more serious.
The source is a Microsoft blog post that effectively just means they won’t be putting any new engineering efforts into it, not that they’ll be removing it any time soon.
Microsoft regularly “deprecates” things and leaves them kicking around and available for up to a decade.
This is the normal cycle of tech news repeating something boring with each repeat making it sound ever more serious.
The source is a Microsoft blog post that effectively just means they won’t be putting any new engineering efforts into it, not that they’ll be removing it any time soon.
Microsoft regularly “deprecates” things and leaves them kicking around and available for up to a decade.