Windows 10 coming soon
Posted: Mon May 11, 2015 12:56 am
MS hasn't announced an exact date yet but formal launch is expected sometime this summer. I've been running the technical preview for a while now (free to use but will expire and stop booting at a certain date). It will be a free upgrade for qualified Windows 7 (with Service Pack 1) and 8.1 PCs for the first year after launch. After that, it will be continually updated: Microsoft has indicated it wants 10 to be the "last major version" of Windows, such that the fragmentation between versions of Windows becomes a thing of the past and every Win10 PC is always up to date. They'll try to get as many upgrades as possible because they want as many users as possible on the new OS. The upgrade might be easier for 8.1 users than some of the Windows 7 holdouts.
For the desktop version it's underselling the OS to call it 'Windows 8.1 with a start menu' although that will be the main "new" feature it's known for. There's plenty of other stuff besides that, both under the hood and visible.
- A new "Edge" internet browser, as the default with modern features and with older code stripped out to make it leaner and quicker. IE will stay around for backwards compatibility (essentially unchanged from IE11 present in Win 8.1).
- notifications center integrated into taskbar
- the digital assistant 'Cortana' (MS answer to Siri/Google Now) integrated into Windows, with it's own search box (can be configured as an icon to save taskbar space, or turned off entirely if desired) next to the Start button (will also accept speech input through a mic)
- a somewhat niche feature but one a subset of power users wanted for years, virtual desktops. MS calls it "Task View" and it gets a pinned taskbar button next to the Cortana search box
- new set of default apps and a new look and feel
- a new version of the DirectX subsystem is optimized for performance, and is designed to let new games run faster in DX12 on WIn10 than in DX11.x on earlier Windows versions
- new security and other features under the hood
As to the start menu itself, it's a hybrid of classic start menu features with Windows 8.x style start screen features: the list to the left with pinned app tiles to the right of that. The user is free to remove tiles if wanted, on the other hand pinning ordinary desktop programs as a tile is also supported so it can be used as a quick access area for frequently used programs.
It also continues the unification of Windows on traditional desktop/laptops, hybrids, tablets, phones, and XBox. Windows across the whole range will have basically the same core with the user interface adapting to different form factors and types of input. For hybrid laptop/tablets a new "continuum" feature automatically adapts the interface between desktop mode and tablet mode when the keyboard is attached and detached. New "universal apps" will work in a similar fashion: the same core app on all Windows 10 devices with an adaptable user interface such that the user interface is optimized for the particular type of device. The Windows store will also gain the ability to sell and manage ordinary desktop programs (in the current 8.1 store desktop programs are just present as links to the download website).
There's also an entirely new device, the 'HoloLens' VR system or "augmented reality" as MS might prefer to call it. This is really cool stuff, with applications tied into 3-D modeling among other things.
http://www.microsoft.com/microsoft-hololens/en-us
So does this sound like something you'd upgrade to or not?
For the desktop version it's underselling the OS to call it 'Windows 8.1 with a start menu' although that will be the main "new" feature it's known for. There's plenty of other stuff besides that, both under the hood and visible.
- A new "Edge" internet browser, as the default with modern features and with older code stripped out to make it leaner and quicker. IE will stay around for backwards compatibility (essentially unchanged from IE11 present in Win 8.1).
- notifications center integrated into taskbar
- the digital assistant 'Cortana' (MS answer to Siri/Google Now) integrated into Windows, with it's own search box (can be configured as an icon to save taskbar space, or turned off entirely if desired) next to the Start button (will also accept speech input through a mic)
- a somewhat niche feature but one a subset of power users wanted for years, virtual desktops. MS calls it "Task View" and it gets a pinned taskbar button next to the Cortana search box
- new set of default apps and a new look and feel
- a new version of the DirectX subsystem is optimized for performance, and is designed to let new games run faster in DX12 on WIn10 than in DX11.x on earlier Windows versions
- new security and other features under the hood
As to the start menu itself, it's a hybrid of classic start menu features with Windows 8.x style start screen features: the list to the left with pinned app tiles to the right of that. The user is free to remove tiles if wanted, on the other hand pinning ordinary desktop programs as a tile is also supported so it can be used as a quick access area for frequently used programs.
It also continues the unification of Windows on traditional desktop/laptops, hybrids, tablets, phones, and XBox. Windows across the whole range will have basically the same core with the user interface adapting to different form factors and types of input. For hybrid laptop/tablets a new "continuum" feature automatically adapts the interface between desktop mode and tablet mode when the keyboard is attached and detached. New "universal apps" will work in a similar fashion: the same core app on all Windows 10 devices with an adaptable user interface such that the user interface is optimized for the particular type of device. The Windows store will also gain the ability to sell and manage ordinary desktop programs (in the current 8.1 store desktop programs are just present as links to the download website).
There's also an entirely new device, the 'HoloLens' VR system or "augmented reality" as MS might prefer to call it. This is really cool stuff, with applications tied into 3-D modeling among other things.
http://www.microsoft.com/microsoft-hololens/en-us
So does this sound like something you'd upgrade to or not?