Riiiiiigggggghhhhhht...
The average user is not buying enterprise software.
I thought you were referring to the article, not your own personal use.
Although I do have Windows 10, I am on the Insider's Preview on my personal machine, and it updates a LOT. It's almost annoying, but I did promise to help evaluate it—including the update process. I HAVE complained vigorously, with lots of succinct input, when it goes wrong, etc., so they are getting the feedback.
The idea of these Windows 10 updates is to incrementally and continuously improve the product. MSFT calls that Windows as a Service, so they claim there will never be a Windows 11, 12, 13, etc., as if you own this license, over the months and years improvements and changes will be made to the OS rather than have to buy an upgrade.
Honestly I have my doubts, but am willing to see it through. I think including the various component manufacturer's drivers in the updates is a bad idea. There's just too many; tens of thousands, and when combined, one fix can have a detrimental effect on other drivers being updated simultaneously. I do think after several BAD issues with that this year, they're coming round on it.