Information that was widely circulated calling Microsoft will launch Windows 9 or Threshold. Apparently, this is not the latest OS called Windows 9, but Windows 10.
Executive vice president for Microsoft's Operating Systems Group, Terry Myerson reveals new name of Windows 10 as the company's approach to operating systems that offer new customized experience. Windows 9 is considered incompatible with the idea.
Thus, Windows 10 combines the traditional elements of the touch features of Windows 7 and Windows 8 along with other new features. Start menu appear familiar to users and additional Live Tiles on Windows 8.
In a preview video, shown in the Start menu and the Live Tiles are customizable. Menu and Live Tiles can be resized (resize).
The Start menu can be expanded up beyond the user's screen, so the user can shift the screen left and right to see each app (just in Windows 8). Metro applications now appear in the Windows format that can be resized.
Part taskbar also improved, so that the user can see all open applications. Still no keyboard commands Alt + Tab, which also displays each application that is running.
Microsoft formally divulged Windows 10 today, and the organization is wanting to disperse a Technical Preview of the new working framework tomorrow. At Microsoft's occasion today there were various machines running the Windows 10 Technical Preview, and I got a chance to quickly investigate the new OS. While Microsoft pushed hard with touch on Windows 8, Windows 10 is the complete inverse. In the event that you mouse into the corners to discover the dubious Charms Bar they generally won't trigger and baffle. Rather, you're welcomed with the commonplace Windows desktop and Start Menu from the minute you utilize Windows 10. It's Windows 7 at this moment and ahead of schedule in its improvement, however it has some fascinating changes holding up inside.
THE START MENU RETURNS TO FOCUS WINDOWS ON THE DESKTOP
The Start Menu is the most clear expansion. Much the same as in Windows 7 and different forms before it, the Start Menu generally acts in the same way. Microsoft has done a u-turn here, however its additionally viewed as the way it can modernize its Start Menu and it seems to have paid off. It's adjustable enough that you can resize it, stick customary and present day applications, or just have it match the shade of your desktop wallpaper. These insights of Windows 8 beam through specifically in the Windows 10 Start Menu, and in spite of the fact that the general interface feels like the Windows desktop, the Start Menu feels positively new but then well known in the meantime.Windows 10 users are expected to be launched by the middle of next year.
-
Blogger Comment
-
Facebook Comment
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
0 komentar :
Post a Comment