Microsoft Announces Windows 10

Windows 10

With rumours mounting regarding Microsoft’s next operating system, the company has now announced that it will be called Windows 10.

Windows 8 is a sorry state. Meant to be the very best operating system in terms of catering to desktop and tablet users, those using non-touchscreen devices found themselves baffled by the Windows 8′s layout. The Metro layout gave users live tiles to keep track of sports, news and the weather but it also removed the longstanding Start button which was seen as a confusing design choice given that so many users had enjoyed the Start menu’s practicality for so long. As a result, Microsoft could only do one thing to appease its users – bring the Start button back – and with the announcement of Windows 10, it seems that the company is doing just that.

Yes, bizarrely Microsoft’s next operating system won’t be called Windows 9, as previous reports led us to believe. Instead the company is naming it Windows 10 to signal what a big step this is from its predecessor. But what’s in a name? Well, other than the Start button, we will still have those live tiles just not in the way that we know them. Specifically, we’ll be able to drag and drop tiles into our Start menu, resizing them as we see fit and providing us with easier access to the software and files that we care about.

David Johnson who covers Microsoft for Forrester Research explained that “The Start Menu is perhaps the most important thing that will make the desktop experience familiar to business users, and will help it reduce resistance to its installation.” The statistics show that he is likely correct; Windows 8 powers just 13.4% PCs, meanwhile Windows 7 powers 51.2% and even Windows XP, which is no longer supported by Microsoft, powers 23.9% of PCs. So, understandably Microsoft would need to do something drastic to win casual consumers and business users over.

Is the Start menu a big enough selling point, though? The company mentioned “universal apps” that are tailored to a range of devices which is promising but there was no mention of other popular features such as the Cortana virtual assistant (think Siri, but Microsoft branded) that’s been seen on Windows Phones. Bringing Cortana to Windows 10 could be a huge draw for those left burnt by Windows 8 and it would be in Microsoft’s best interests to include it. However, we’ve yet to see all of Windows 10′s features but Microsoft says that in addition to rolling out a technical preview (an unfinished version, mainly for developers), they will also reveal more info at their Build conference in April, 2015.

Microsoft adds that they will release Windows 10 before the end of 2015. We’ll keep you posted once we know more.

Source: BBC

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Windows 9 Video Showcases Your Most Wanted Feature

Microsoft Windows presentation

With the Windows 9 tech preview rolling out, we get our first look at Microsoft’s new operating system ahead of its public release.

There are many things that you, I and likely many other people dislike about Windows 8. Commonly despised is the ‘Metro’ theme of squares and live tiled widgets that Microsoft included to accommodate disgruntled tablet users and those using laptops and computers with fancy, hi-tech touchscreens. Then, in no particular order, there’s the unnecessary charms bar and its rarely used hotlinks, the removal of the Start button and the fact that Windows became harder to navigate despite ‘navigation’ being the one thing an operating system is meant to be good at. So in short, Windows 8 was a bit of a dud. Windows 9 hopes to improve that though and in a recorded video of the operating system in action it’s guaranteed to give us our most well-liked Windows features back.

The first thing you’ll note in the video above is that yes! Finally! We have our beloved start button once again! Well, sort of. It’s not ‘Start’ as we know it because it’s still labelled with the Windows logo, but its functions appear to be the same as that helpful menu we last saw in Windows 7 (or in a Windows 8 mod if you’re particularly tech savvy). Just like before we’ll get a quick list of programs with easy, pinnable access to many others, but, those pesky live tiles are back. They’re less annoying than before though, which is good and the video above suggests that we’ll be able to add, remove and reposition the live tiles as we see fit to save them from billowing out across our desktop wallpapers like the contents of a trash bag following a hurricane. We know that the charms bar (the list of settings that comes up when you move your cursor down the right side of the screen in Windows 8) has been removed too. Although it wasn’t shown in the video, earlier Windows 9 leaks suggest that it’s hit the scrap heap so that’s fantastic news for the Windows purists and those who felt shafted by Windows 8’s design.

For those who did appreciate Windows 8’s Metro theme though, Microsoft are still catering to you too. Rather than being an uncomfortable juxtaposition of modern, touch-friendly design and the Start menu days of old, you’ll now be able to choose which one your computer uses. If you liked the Metro style then in Windows 9 you’ll be able to enable it in seconds, switching between the two options in no time at all.

It looks like Microsoft are listening then and Windows 9 already looks like a massive improvement – and that’s just apparent from a two and a half minute video. It will be nice to see what else their brand new operating system has up its sleeves and we’ll keep you posted once we know more.

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Windows 9 Preview Build to Roll Out Next Month

Windows 8 Consumer Preview

After Windows 8 disappointed many of its users, Microsoft sets the ball in motion to start previewing Windows 9.

If the game of computer operating systems was a round of bowling, Windows 8 would be a notorious turkey, rolling down the gutter and getting jammed at the end of the lane where not even the most committed lane attendee would be willing to go over and fish it out. From its very foundations, Microsoft have bungled the release of their most recent operating system as they made it too touchscreen-centric, putting off a large amount of customers who don’t have touchscreen enabled machines as they found it hard to get used to the square, app-like layout which is a complete 180 from the PC operating systems we’d been using years beforehand. So a range of problems thwarted Windows 8 then, but the biggest question, after ‘when are Microsoft going to fix it?’ is simply ‘when are they going to give us Windows 9?’

We might not have to wait much longer for Windows 9, as it happens, because Microsoft are currently working on something called ‘Windows Threshold’. Said to be a placeholder name for their next OS, Windows Threshold/Windows 9 will finally give us the features we’ve been asking for since Windows 8 debuted as well as scrapping the features that the dud of an operating system brought with it. This includes giving us a Desktop mode with a start menu if we’re using PCs with a keyboard and a mouse while systems that have both touchscreen and desktop capabilities (such as the Surface Pro) will stick with the existing, app-friendly layout. The Charms bar (the list of settings options that sometimes show up when you cursor scrolls the side of your screen) is said to have been canned.

Furthermore, Cortana (Microsoft’s answer to Siri) could also be wheeled out onto PCs, with the personal assistant software potentially being quite useful as it has reviewed positively on mobile devices. It’ll need to be tested out though, as will everything else, when the first preview build of Windows 9 goes live next month. That’s according to some unnamed (but apparently reputable) sources, who also claim that this early build “will be public and available to all those interested.” For those who don’t want to play tester and would rather wait for the full thing, Windows 9 is expected to launch in Spring, 2015 so we’ll keep you posted once we know more.

Source: ZDNet

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