Tag Archives: windows 10 features

Windows 10 review: a fresh Start

Windows 10 has finally arrived, but how does it compare to previous versions, asks Sophie Curtis, and has Microsoft succeeded in righting the wrongs of Windows 8?

Windows 10, the latest version of Microsoft’s 29-year-old operating system,launches worldwide today. Following a hostile reception to Windows 8in 2012, which was only placated in small part by the Windows 8.1 update in 2013, Microsoft is hoping that Windows 10 can help it regain favour among its 1.5 billion daily users.

Windows 10 rights a lot of the wrongs done by Microsoft in Windows 8. One of the things that people hated about Windows 8 was the feeling that they were constantly being pushed to use “live tiles”, which were designed for touch-based computing, even when they were using a traditional desktop set-up with a keyboard and mouse.

Another was the removal of the Start menu, which many people relied on as their first point of access to all software. This was replaced in Windows 8.1 with a Start button in the bottom left hand corner of the screen, but rather than opening up a navigation menu, it launched the tile-based touch user interface that most people were trying to escape.

Although live tiles are still a feature of Windows 10, they are not nearly as obtrusive. When you open up the new Start menu, there is a panel of live tiles on the right, where people can “pin” their favourite apps, but there is also a traditional Windows 7-style Start menu on the left, that allows users to sort through all of their files, apps and settings systematically.

More importantly, clicking on a live tile does not result in you being transported to another virtual universe where the app takes over your entire screen and it feels impossible to escape, as it did in Windows 8. Rather, it opens in a neat little window on your desktop, and generally behaves in a much more intutitive way.

Within this context, live tiles seem less repellent than they did in Windows 8. They blend much more into the wider user experience in desktop mode, and if you really can’t stand the sight of them in your Start menu, you can unpin them all, and you will be left with just the list menu on the left hand side.

The advantage of having them, of course, is that if you’re using a convertible device that operates in both desktop and tablet mode, then applications dowloaded from the Windows Store will automatically adjust themselves to suit the mode, making switching between the keyboard and touch interface feel seamless.

So if you’re working on an Office Word document at your desk and then have to go and catch a train, you can switch to tablet mode and carry on working on the same document in touchscreen mode as soon as you get a seat.

Microsoft has replaced the despised “Charms” bar from Windows 8, which appears when you swipe or click on the right hand side of the screen, with an “Action Center” that provides notifications and quick access to settings, and is genuinely quite useful.

What Windows 7 users, in particular, will like about Windows 10 is the speed and responsiveness of the new system. Given that Windows 7 is now six years old, the software inevitably feels a bit clunky, but it is really noticable that programs start faster and run faster in Windows 10, and the whole system feels more slick.

If, like me, you stopped using Internet Explorer years ago, Microsoft’s new web broswer, Edge, is a revelation. It feels more like the Google Chrome browser, with a light, stripped-back user interface and a simple set of tools along the top, under the search bar.

For example, “favourites” lets you bookmark a page and cache it for reading offline, “web note” lets you annotate live pages and then save a screenshot of the page, and “share page” lets you send a link to friends via email or social network.

Read mode is also great for people who like to read long articles online, allowing you to strip out all the ads, and sidebars, pop-ups and links, and scroll through a single column of text and pictures. You can’t use it on every page, and you still have to go back to the standard layout in order to navigate, but it’s a really nice user-friendly feature.

If you want more sophisticated features, you may want to download one of the more heavyweight browsers, or stick with Internet Explorer, which also comes pre-loaded on Windows 10. But for people who simply want to browse the web – news sites, social networks, video streaming sevices and the like – Edge does a great job.

Cortana, Microsoft’s virtual personal assistant, is integrated into Windows 10, and appears as a search box on the task bar. You can either type queries into the search box or issue voice commands by saying “Hey Cortana,” and then asking a question.

To start with, at least, most people will use this just as they would any other search function. Questions like “How old is Harrison Ford?” or “How do I get to Buckingham Palace?” will return responses from Bing search. However, Cortana is designed to be cleverer than that.

If you give her access to your email and calendar clients, for example, she can start to act more like a real personal assistant, extracting relevant information and proactively offering information.

So, in theory, if you have been discussing a particular airline flight in an email, and that flight is delayed, Cortana will alert you to the delay. Or of you have a meeting across town and there is heavy traffic, it will tell you when you need to leave to avoid being late.

I haven’t had Windows 10 for long enough to really put this to the test. The idea is that, over time, Cortana gets to know more about you and becomes better at pushing the right information to you at the right time. However, it’s a bit buggy to start off with, and quite a lot of my personal questions ended up prompting generic answers from Bing.

Suffice to say, it’s not quite there yet, but it is fun to play with, and I’m sure this is something that Microsoft will continue to refine over time. If you feel comfortable sharing your personal information with Cortana, it will become more useful, just like Apple’s Siri and Google Now.

There are, of course, many other features in Windows 10, like the ability to run multiple “desktops” side by side, which is the virtual equivalent of having mutiple PC monitors with different apps open on each screen. It’s quite a niche feature, but one that some people will no doubt find useful. You can also “snap” applications that are open to different corners of the screen to make them easier to view.

Microsoft has also competely revamped its entertainment offering, replacing Windows Media Center with modified versions of Xbox Music and Xbox Video, which have been renamed as ‘Groove’ and ‘Movies & TV’ respectively, and a built-in Xbox app, that offers a unified view of your games, the activity of your friends, and your own gaming activities.

These all feel much more slick and modern than the clunky old Windows Media Center app, which was essentially built for offline media consumption. You can stream and download music and videos and import your own collections to make all your music accessible in one place. Of course if you use third party streaming apps like Spotify or Netflix, these will have to be downloaded separately.

What I can confidently say about Windows 10 is that it makes sense. These days, technology should be intuitive enough that you can just pick it up and use it without any instructions or guidance, and Windows 10 just about achieves that, which – given the carcrash that was Windows 8 – is high praise indeed.

Windows 10 is what Windows 8 ought to have have been – a piece of software that is suitable for the mobile era but that does not neglect the millions of people who still use it on a desktop.

There are still bumps to iron out, but with a 4.4 million-strong team of ‘Insiders’ continuously monitoring and providing feedback on any bugs and glitches, and the ability to issue regular updates over-the-air, Microsoft could not be in a better position to give customers the Windows experience they have long been hoping for.

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Windows 10 Build 10240 is the RTM version, but Microsoft wishes you’d stop calling it that

As the Windows 10 ship draws close to port, we’ve seen confirmation from multiple sources that yes, Windows 10 Build 10240 is the RTM version that was sent out to OEMs for installation. The problem with this classification, however, is that Microsoft now refuses to use it. When Mark Hachman of PCWorld reached out to the company for confirmation, he was met with the following: “This build is the latest Windows 10 build, and we’ll continue to update Windows 10 code as we head toward launch and beyond,” a Microsoft spokeswoman said in a statement. “We are embracing a new way to deliver Windows.”

Far be it for me to contradict Microsoft, but that doesn’t seem to be what’s actually happening. Apple and Google both distribute OS updates over-the-air (well, carriers do). They still launch cohesive branded products around particular codenames. Microsoft is embracing the concept of Windows-as-a-service, but not because other companies that distribute similar products have done so. Instead, this push seems to be more about driving consumers to accept the idea of an ever-evolving, auto-updating software package.

Microsoft has no plans to charge for Windows 10 as a subscription service, but it’s hard to see the company not going down that path at some point. It continues to gain subscribers for its Office 365 system, despite the fact that Office 365 is a terrible value for any single user, costing you as much in one year as the Home version of office typically costs, period (and Office can easily be used on a 5-7 year cycle). The company wouldn’t even need to charge much — $5 per month would likely beat the revenue it got per-user over the long term, especially when combined with OEM sales for new notebook installations.

Windows 10

With Windows licensing revenue falling steadily (OEM licensing was down 22% this quarter while overall revenue in the segment fell by 4%), Microsoft is going to be under pressure to create new methods of extracting value from that market. The company has already said that Windows 10 will be free for its lifetime, and I’m not suggesting anything different, but going forward, I doubt MS simply gives up on Windows revenue. One potential replacement would be revenue from the Windows Store, but that’s dependent on the Windows Store actually offering software that anyone would want to buy.

Returning to the Windows 10 RTM issue, I’d be surprised if the industry stopped using the term. RTM is an understood point at which a product is shipped for installation on a system. Like “gone gold,” it captures a particular moment and is useful for denoting that yes, the OS has been deemed ready and shipped out. Just as motherboard companies still make reference to the BIOS as opposed to the UEFI, it’s not because the term remains accurate — it’s because the term is known and understood by the target audience.

One potential reason for why Microsoft wants to move away from single-number versioning is that it now updates applications separately from the core OS. You might download a new version of Mail or Photos, thereby changing your experience with the device, but still be on the same version number. In the past, Microsoft rarely did this — you had whichever features were installed on your Service Pack or original installation, and the company only occasionally released updates for application-level functionality.

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