Free, free, free: 7 important features you need to know about Windows 10
Microsoft showed us the final
version of Windows 10 in an event yesterday, and the roll-out will begin later
this year. But what’s new in Microsoft’s latest OS? We take a quick look
at the biggest and most important features of Windows 10.
Free, free, free: For the
first time ever, Windows 10 will be a free upgrade for Windows 7, Windows
8.1 and Windows Phone 8.1 users.
As we
noted here, Microsoft has taken a cue out of Apple’s book which has been
given OS X and iOS upgrades away for free, to ensure that users don’t have to
shell out money for an OS.
If your PC or laptop is running Windows 7 and
Windows 8.1 and your Windows phone has the Windows Phone 8.1 OS, you will get a
free upgrade to the latest version of Windows 10 – in the first year.
What is not clear is if users on laptop and
desktops will have to pay after the first year. In an age, where free OS and
software is the new mantra, Microsoft has taken the right step by making
Windows 10 free of cost. Hopefully the free upgrade will continue after year
one as well.
Windows 10 Spartan browser.
No more Windows Phone, it’s all the same: Unity across operating systems is something that Apple and Google
have been going on about for sometime and Microsoft also clearly believes that
this is the way forward.
What this also means, is that the name
‘Windows Phone OS’ is actually defunct. Also tablet users can forget the horror
of having to deal with something like a new Windows RT on their devices, which
received terrible user feedback.
Windows 10 will ensure that desktops, mobiles,
laptops, tablets, 2-in-1 devices will all run the same Windows 10 OS, which
will be optimised based on the platform. This is great news for those who are
heavily invested in the Windows eco-system and for app developers who won’t
have to create a separate app for mobile or tablet.
Bigger Start Menu, Action Centre: There
have been some improvements thanks to feedback from testers of the Windows
Insider program. The Start Menu is now available in full screen instead of the
limited in Windows 8.1. The Action Centre has quick buttons to switch Wi-fi and
Bluetooth on or off.
There is a new Notification Centre which is
seen above the Action Centre and notifications in these will be synced across
devices. The Notification centre brings you updates and alerts from your email,
weather, news sources you’ve subscribed to and it also has Cortana built in.
The Control Panel and Settings menu have been
merged into a single folder. Also when using a 2-in-1, when you go from a
desktop mode to a tablet mode, users will be prompted if they want to switch to
tablet mode.
Cortana for Windows: Microsoft
has gone a step ahead of Apple by bringing its personal voice-assistant
Cortana to all Windows 10 devices, including desktops and laptops, which is a
massive plus point.
On the desktop, Cortana will be seen as a
search box located beside the Start button. Cortana now supports 7 languages
and can speak in impersonations as well. You can also ask Cortana to open apps
on your desktop such as PowerPoint or Word. You can also dictate emails in
Outlook using Cortana and send them by voice commands.
As
we noted here, Cortana has a new feature called Notebook that keeps a tab
on all the saved information. It also keeps a track of the sports scores,
travel, weather and such similar information that you may be interested in. You
can also add other things that you want Cortana to keep a track of.
Universal apps for PCs: Microsoft
is going the Apple way by finally introducing universal apps. These will have a
similar design across devices and will work across PCs, laptop, smartphones and
tablets.
Outlook will come with an in-built Word engine
which provides the Office ribbon, which allows multiple ways of formatting
Office documents. The calendar app will also be synced across devices and
will sport a consistent design as well. There’s also a new Photo App gallery,
which looks inspired by Google+.
All pictures taken on the devices, as well as
photos on One Drive will be merged together and the app will automatically
delete the duplicate files to reduce the clutter. The Photo app will
automatically enhance your photographs by default, much like Google+. It will
also create Photo Albums automatically based on date, location and the people
in the photographs.
Other universal apps on the list will be for
Videos, Music, Maps, People & Messaging.
Hello Project Spartan: Microsoft
unveiled its
Project Spartan at the event, which is indeed a new browser which
comes with Cortana built in with its contextual searching. For example, if you
look up restaurant on Spartan, Cortana will throw in a map, menu and contact
details as well.
On Spartan some of the new features will
allows users to annotate a webpage using a stylus or touch interface, click on
any section of a webpage to type out a comment and then share this page with
friends or co-workers. Also while the page shared will be frozen, the links
inside them will be active.
Reading mode in Project Spartan, similar to
the reading mode in Apple’s Safari, will put articles in a layout that gets rid
of all the unnecessary elements on a page. You also get a Reading List feature
that syncs across all devices, even offline, which is quite identical to what’s
seen on the Pocket app.
By the way Microsoft has clarified that the
introduction of Spartan doesn’t mean that Internet Explorer 11 is going
anywhere. According to
a blogpost, the company wrote that “Spartan loads the IE11 engine for
legacy enterprise web sites when needed.” Essentially enterprise websites that
older technologies designed only for Internet Explorer, such as custom ActiveX
controls and Browser Helper Objects will load on Internet Explorer, which will
also be available on Windows 10.
Internet Explorer will use the same dual
rendering engines as Spartan, ensuring web developers can consistently target
the latest web standards, says the blog post.
Gaming on Windows 10: The Xbox
app will come bundled with all Windows 10 devices. A new feature will allows
users to record 30 seconds of gameplay which can be sent across to Xbox Live so
that Xbox users can watch it as well.Windows 10 also brings cross-play, which
lets users play with a friend on an Xbox One while they are using a Windows 10
PC. Microsoft also has plans to launch Windows 10 on the Xbox One platform.
Game DVR, which gives simple access to recording,
editing, and sharing a player’s most epic gaming moments on an Xbox will now
come to Windows 10, and is accessible by simply pressing Windows+G.
Also games
on Xbox One can be streamed through your home network to your Windows
10 PC or tablet, anywhere in your house. Xbox One gamers will also be able to
many of their favourite console games on their PC. And many Xbox One
accessories will work interchangeably on the console and PC.