The
enduring unpopularity of Windows 8 meant it was vital that Microsoft nail its
next OS to prove that it was an aberration.
Windows
10, not Windows 9 as you and arithmetic would expect, looks to be a marked
improvement.
Instead
of adding a host of new complicated features, Windows 10 was designed to
simplify - so much that it could work on screens ranging from 4 to 80 inches.
That’s
the central conceit of Windows 10; creating a shared user interface for
smartphones to tablets all the way up to PCs.
Microsoft knows Windows 8 was a disaster
So
keen was Microsoft to distance itself from the abomination of Windows 8 that
they defied logic and skipped number 9. Their official explanation was vague:
“This product, when you see the product in your fullness I think you'll agree
with us that it's a more appropriate name.”
Everything
else about press conference was an admission that Windows 8 was a
dud, and that the new OS will not be much like it.
Microsoft
OS Chief Terry Myerson said: "It gives the familiarity of Windows 7 with
some of the elements of Windows 8."
Touch
is the main thing they’ll keep roughly the same, and the Charms bar will stay,
though it will be fiddled with.
Microsoft
pretty much came out and said that the user experience of Windows 8 was a
lesson in what not to do.
Windows
10, on the other hand, will transition keyboard use with touch use, with the
device’s interface changing depending on what the user has input.
Start menu makes a comeback
Windows
10 has put the Start Menu back at the front and left of the Microsoft user
interface. When opened, the menu splits into two columns – one the traditional
list, the other app-style icons.
Users
can also manipulate the size and shape of the Start Menu and applications for
which it is a doorway.
And
there’s now universal search from the Start menu, including web results. All in
all, it was a good day for Start.
Improved command prompt for computer geeks
Joe
Belfiore, the man behind Windows Phone, confessed that this was a “geeky”
function. Command prompt is not much used except by those who know what to do
with it.
For
those technology enthusiasts, command prompting got a whole lot easier with
Windows 10. Whereas before you would have to open a context menu and hit paste,
now you can use Ctrl+V as you do anywhere else.
Multi-desktops for multi-tasking
Task
view allows users to access multiple desktop screens where multiple apps are in
use. These mini-screens (kind of like windows) crop up at the bottom of the
interface.
Using
the new “Snap Assist” UI at the side of the screen, you can grab apps from
these other desktops. This is for power users who use lots of programmes all at
once and for extended periods of time.
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