Windows 10, oddly numerated as it may be, will probably be the biggest and most crucial software launch for Microsoft in years -- not least because the company has decided to make the upgrade free, at least for some, and for a limited time. Considering that, there's not much to lose if you want to make the switch when the latest version of Windows is released to the public on July 29. Let's have a look at what there is to gain.
Start menu
Easily the most frustrating change from the well-regarded Windows 7 to the more frustrating Windows 8 is the way it handles the Start Menu. Or rather, the way it doesn't handle it -- Windows 8 replaced one of the most consistent parts of the operating system's user interface with a full-screen alternative designed for easier use with tablets.The "Metro" interface is in fact very effective for touch control, but it can be cumbersome and tedious for the vast majority of people using their computers with the standard keyboard and mouse/keypad setup. Some were so desperate for the old Start menu they added it back in with third-party programs.
Windows 10 brings the Start menu back in a big way. Not only do you get the old-fashioned list of folders and links that dyed-in-the-wool Windows users have come to rely on, you get a more compact version of the finger-friendly Live Tile launcher as well.
According to Microsoft's various pre-launch presentations, the key here is customization: the end user will be able to show or hide various elements to suit their own tastes. The integrated search tool, which has worked rather well ever since Windows Vista (believe it or not), is also getting web search capabilities through Bing. And yes, you can launch web links in any browser you want.
Cortana
Google and Apple have made huge strides in voice control on their mobile platforms. By all accounts Microsoft has kept pace with Cortana, the Windows Phone 7 voice assistant named after the artificial intelligence from the Halo game series. When Windows 10 hits desktops, laptops, and tablets this summer, Microsoft will bring voice control to its primary operating system in a way that far exceeds what has come before. Cortana will be so central to Microsoft's new operating system that Toshiba is already planning to include a Cortana button on some upcoming laptops.Cortana can handle standard web searches and contextual information with ease. For example, asking "what's the weather like in New York" will give you a near-instant voice reply with the current forecast. Cortana also has access to your personal information in Microsoft's connected services (at least if you allow it), and can perform basic PC actions from voice commands. What's more, Cortana will also be available on Windows 10 for phones (when it launches) and eventually on the Xbox One, iOS, and Android -- Microsoft wants to make "her" your one-stop shop for cross-platform voice control.
Edge Internet browser
Internet Explorer has become something of a joke among both users and web developers for the last few years. That's not entirely justified -- later versions of Microsoft's in-house browser have actually been pretty stable -- but there's no denying that the once and future king of browser market share has a lot of future left to claim. The company's answer to falling user counts and the threat of Google Chrome is Edge, a brand new Windows web browser built from the ground up with a newer, faster rendering engine.In addition to the speed boost, Edge has a Swiss army knife of digital tools including integration with Cortana voice actions, a built-in reading list for unread web stories, support for digital "ink" from tablet styli, and a simple, clean users interface. It's such a dramatic improvement over Internet Explorer that you might actually consider the default option for your primary browser, something that hasn't been true for most power users for quite a while.
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