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In the fall of 2014, Microsoft announced its newest operating system, Windows 10, and gave a brief preview of the upcoming software, which is designed to incorporate elements of both Windows 8 and Windows 7, in an attempt to make it more appealing to users who have thus far not upgraded to Windows 8.

Today, Microsoft is holding an official unveiling of Windows 10, sharing new details on the OS and demonstrating how it works across a range of devices. With Windows 10, Microsoft is hoping to cut down on operating system fragmentation with one unified platform thats designed to run on PCs, tablets, phones, and more.

Microsoft's tagline for Windows 10 is "More personal computing," a philosophy that's evidenced in its three design guidelines that it used when developing the software: mobility of experience, trust, and natural interaction, through a range of different input options from mice and keyboards to pens and simple touch.

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Windows 10 somewhat mirrors Apple's efforts to unify iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite by creating a deep level of integration with features like Continuity, because Microsoft promises a unified experience and platform integration that will make it easy to put one device down and continue where you left off on another device.

In an effort to get its users to adopt Windows 10, Microsoft is planning to distribute Windows 10 to Windows 8.1 and Windows 7 users at no cost for the first year, which is an unprecedented move for the Washington-based company. Unlike Apple, Microsoft has never offered Windows for free, but Apple's success getting the majority of its users on the same operating system has likely inspired Microsoft to make the same effort.

Once a device is upgraded to Windows 10, Microsoft plans to keep the operating system current for the lifetime of the device. With a unified operating system, developers can target every single Windows device, and Microsoft is planning for long term support.

"Windows 10 is so much more than the latest version of Windows," said Microsoft VP of Operating Systems Terry Myerson. "Windows is turning into a service that will run across every device."

At today's event, Microsoft demoed Windows 10 running on several different devices, beginning with a tablet equipped with a keyboard and a mouse, running the full Windows 10 operating system. Windows 10 melds elements of Windows 7 with Windows 8.1, maintaining the tile system but also returning the iconic Start Menu.

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There's an action center that delivers notifications and supports quick actions like turning off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and there's also a merged PC Settings and control panel option, which will be universal across all devices. With Continuum, a new feature that's designed to make transitioning from PC mode to tablet mode seamless, the mouse and keyboard were removed and Windows 10 offered a popup that transformed it into tablet mode. "A device like this elegantly transforms from one mode to another."

Microsoft also demoed its virtual assistant Cortana on a Windows PC, demonstrating her ability to search for information, set reminders, and more. Previously, Cortana was limited to Windows Phone, but the assistant will be available across all devices with the introduction of Windows 10. Cortana in Windows 10 is quite powerful, able to answer queries like "Bring up all my photos from December," or "Play my music," and she'll be integrated into the Maps app.

Windows 10 was also shown off on a small form-factor tablet and on a phone, with an emphasis being placed on the unification between the devices, with the same methods being used to access settings, apps, and more. For messaging, for example, Microsoft has plans for Skype integration, making it easy to transition from messaging to making a Skype call. Microsoft apps like Office and Outlook will be available on PCs, phones, and tablets, and it will be easy to transition between apps on various devices.

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Microsoft is introducing a slew of universal apps, and in addition to those mentioned above, Microsoft has a new Photos app that's formatted to fit any screen on a tablet, phone, or PC. It aggregates photos from all devices, providing one simple view of photos and filters clutter like double shots, which sounds similar to what Apple is aiming to do with its own Photos app.

Along with Windows 10, Microsoft debuted a new browser for the modern web, which is currently codenamed Project Spartan. It's a new web browsing experience for Windows 10, which has a new rendering engine, a new look and feel, and features like a note-taking mode that lets users draw directly on their browsers before sharing a link, a reading mode with reading list and offline browsing, and access to Cortana in the browser.

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Finally, Microsoft debuted a unified Xbox app that can be accessed on PCs, tablets, and smartphones, connecting those devices to Microsoft's Xbox gaming platform. It can be used for sharing gaming clips, and with Windows 10, Microsoft plans to enable streaming of any Xbox game to Windows PCs and tablets running Windows 10 in the home.

Microsoft has already provided access to Windows 10 to some users through its Windows Insider Program, a project that it plans to continue to use to seed out new Windows 10 features. Project Spartan and the features shown off today will come to Windows Insider testers in the coming months.

Article Link: Microsoft Demos Free Windows 10 Update, Debuts New 'Project Spartan' Web Browser
 
It's definitely an improvement over Windows 8. They've realised that an OS running across multiple device types needs to adapt rather than just try running one UI across them all. It's basically what Windows 8 should have been from day one.
 
seems they are all trying to make a computer in the cloud these days and have devices that access that. All we'll have is very simple display units.
 
They have no other choice but to offer it for free. Windows 8 was a complete disaster that left a bad taste in my (and many users) mouths. Besides, you don't need Windows to do computing tasks any more.
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

They might mean it will be free to get for a year but it will carry on working after that.
 
It's a reputation patch, much like 7 was for Vista. Even if IE is pretty decent these days, the name has garnered such a bad reputation over the years, they might as well scrap it entirely and start from scratch.

They are also apparently removing the backwards compatibility stuff. This should make it faster, less glitchy, and improvements easier and quicker.
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

It's not going subscription. If it were, you could bet people would be freaking out and burning down MS HQ. Hell, I'd be one of them.

This is just a free upgrade window for Windows 7 and 8 people. If you don't grab it in that amount of time, you have to pay for it, like you've had to with every other previous version of Windows. Basically, it's MS' way to get everyone on one common platform as quickly as possible.
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

Nobody said anything about a subscription model.

Or do you just like forcing words into people's mouths to prove a weak point?
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

Yea that's not what they said. You just have to upgrade in the first year to get it for free, else you upgrade is the normal upgrade price.
 
Giving it away for free is mind blowing and will really impact their bottom line. Unlike Apple, they rely on the sales of Windows. Apple gets their money by selling you the hardware. MS doesn't really do hardware (other then the xbox/mice/surface tablet)
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

I think that MS is trying to get folks to download it by offering the OS free during the first year of release. If you wait you will pay in year 2 and beyond.

Should help a bit, but with the majority of installs being in the corporate world, it wont help too much, since they are slow to move as it requires updating all their applications that integrate or sit on the OS.
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

Comprehension isn't your strong suit.

They mean that's it's free to purchase for the first year it's released. After that, you'll have to pay for Windows like you always have.

It's a move to get everyone on board Windows 10, to make up for the bad rep Windows 8 had given it.
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

Huh? The upgrade is free for 1 year. If you buy a non-mac computer, you will probably get Win 10 installed on it anyways. I am not clear about the updates, but it seems once you have Win 10, as long as you own th device, all future updates for that device will be free. So you only pay for Windows once during the lifetime of a machine (that is, included in the device's cost). This is exactly Apple's model.

The 1 year window to upgrade for free is a psychological strategy to make sure everyone upgrades ASAP. If they don't they will have to pay. And especially for businesses, this can add up to a tremendous cost if they don't upgrade ASAP.
 
I got admit that I held back a lot on w8 in reluctance, but I was not disappointed when finally installed two months ago on a new machine I built.

I will hold back on WX though
 
Giving it away for free is mind blowing and will really impact their bottom line. Unlike Apple, they rely on the sales of Windows. Apple gets their money by selling you the hardware. MS doesn't really do hardware (other then the xbox/mice/surface tablet)

Not really. I'm sure their stats say 95% of the people just buy a new machine/device rather than purchasing an upgrade and doing it themselves.
 
Free for one year? Is MS really stupid enough to sell an OS that works on a subscription model? Who would buy a computer that has a monthly fee to use?

After the epic failure that was 8, I really thought it was impossible for an MS to do anything even dumber....

I may be wrong here, but I don't think they mean subscription model. I think they're saying that if you download it in the first year you upgrade for free. They're trying to get rid of the fragmentation.

Most Windows users are still on 7, because they refused to upgrade to 8 or 8.1. So MS is pretty much forced to fully support three versions of their OS. I believe this is an attempt to pull a lot of 7 users up to the current version.

My issue is that I think they're inadvertently creating an expectation in their user base at a time in history when Windows is becoming less relevant every day. Unlike Apple, who sells hardware and uses the OS as a way to get you to buy it, MS needs that OS revenue stream for its profitability.

Once someone gets Win 10 for free how willing are they going to be to buy the next version?
 
Might be better than Windows 8 but its still too busy for me. I'm not sold on the live tiles concept. When I look at Windows 8/10 screen my brain doesn't know what to focus on. Information overload.
 
Might be better than Windows 8 but its still too busy for me. I'm not sold on the live tiles concept. When I look at Windows 8/10 screen my brain doesn't know what to focus on. Information overload.

Thanks to Stardock's Start8 utility, the metro interface is hidden for me. I agree, I hate those tiles on a desktop/laptop computer.
 
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