Not to go off-topic, but this has be discussed before. 28000 (26H1) is considered a "dead end" until 27H2 arrives. MS carefully chooses all of the Windows branch numbers, because you can only perform in-place upgrades to a higher branch.
26H1 was always intended to be an one-off branch for ARM PC's, to help showcase their AI features. While MS maintains the 28000 build pipeline for all architectures (ARM, x64), it was never intended for public release on x64.
Because 26H2 will be an Enablement Package release, it was always designed on top of 26100. Installing the 26H2 EP, just like the 25H2 EP before it, bumps up the virtual version to 26030. But the entire tree (24H2/25H2/26H2) was planned years in advance to be based on 26100.
You cannot downgrade from 28000 to 26030. Going backwards is forbidden, it requires a clean install.
The only logical path for 26H1 to converge with 26H2 is a future (so far unnamed) branch higher than 28000. Expert speculation is this will be 27H2. 25H1 was also an ARM special release, but the difference was Windows didn't chose to switch to a single-purpose branch.
26H1 was always intended to be an one-off branch for ARM PC's, to help showcase their AI features. While MS maintains the 28000 build pipeline for all architectures (ARM, x64), it was never intended for public release on x64.
Because 26H2 will be an Enablement Package release, it was always designed on top of 26100. Installing the 26H2 EP, just like the 25H2 EP before it, bumps up the virtual version to 26030. But the entire tree (24H2/25H2/26H2) was planned years in advance to be based on 26100.
You cannot downgrade from 28000 to 26030. Going backwards is forbidden, it requires a clean install.
The only logical path for 26H1 to converge with 26H2 is a future (so far unnamed) branch higher than 28000. Expert speculation is this will be 27H2. 25H1 was also an ARM special release, but the difference was Windows didn't chose to switch to a single-purpose branch.
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