Tuesday, September 30th 2014

Microsoft Announces Windows 10 Operating System

Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday unveiled its next Windows operating system, Windows 10, and gave a first look at an early technical preview for the PC available Oct. 1. The announcement highlighted advancements designed for business, including an updated user experience and enhanced security and management capabilities. The company also introduced the Windows Insider Program, kicking off its largest-ever open collaborative development effort to change the way Windows is built and delivered to best meet the needs of customers. Program participants will receive the technical preview of Windows 10 and a steady stream of builds through the development cycle to use and give feedback on.

"Windows 10 represents the first step of a whole new generation of Windows, unlocking new experiences to give customers new ways to work, play and connect," said Terry Myerson, executive vice president of the Operating Systems group at Microsoft. "This will be our most comprehensive operating system and the best release Microsoft has ever done for our business customers, and we look forward to working together with our broader Windows community to bring Windows 10 to life in the months ahead."
Windows 10: familiarity and consistency across devices
Windows 10 adapts to the devices customers are using - from Xbox to PCs and phones to tablets and tiny gadgets - and what they're doing with a consistent, familiar and compatible experience, enabling even greater productivity. Windows 10 will run across the broadest range of devices ever from the Internet of Things to enterprise datacenters worldwide. Microsoft is also delivering a converged application platform for developers on all devices with a unified app store. Developers will be able to write an application once and deploy it easily across multiple device types, making discovery, purchase and updating easier than ever for customers.

Windows 10: designed for the challenges of modern business
Windows 10 builds nearly everything that businesses need right into the core of the product - including enterprise-grade security, identity and information protection features - in ways that can reduce complexities and provide better experiences than other solutions. One area of advancement is in the work Microsoft has done with user identities to improve resistance to breach, theft or phishing. Windows 10 will also help advance data loss prevention by using containers and data separation at the application and file level, enabling protection that follows the data as it goes from a tablet or PC to a USB drive, email or the cloud.

Management and deployment have been simplified to help lower costs, including in-place upgrades from Windows 7 or Windows 8 that are focused on making device wipe-and-reload scenarios obsolete. Businesses will also have the flexibility to choose how quickly they adopt the latest innovations and influence continued improvements. In addition, organizations will be able to customize an app store specific to their needs and environment. The intent is an app store that will allow for volume app licensing, flexible distribution, and the ability for organizations to reclaim or reuse licenses when necessary.

Technical preview PC productivity
The early technical preview of Windows 10 demonstrates new levels of flexibility, navigation and familiarity through the Windows experience. Features include these:
  • Expanded Start menu. The familiar Start menu is back, providing quick one-click access to the functions and files that people use most, and it includes a new space to personalize with favorite apps, programs, people and websites.
  • Apps that run in a window. Apps from the Windows Store now open in the same format that desktop programs do. They can be resized and moved around, and have title bars at the top allowing users to maximize, minimize and close with a click.
  • Snap enhancements. Working in multiple apps at once is easier and more intuitive with snap improvements. A new quadrant layout allows up to four apps to be snapped on the same screen. Windows will also show other apps and programs running for additional snapping, and it will even make smart suggestions on filling available screen space with other open apps.
  • New Task view button. The new Task view button on the task bar enables one view for all open apps and files, allowing for quick switching and one-touch access to any desktop created.
  • Multiple desktops. Instead of too many apps and files overlapping on a single desktop, it's easy to create and switch between distinct desktops for different purposes and projects - whether for work or personal use.
Open and collaborative development
The introduction of the Windows Insider Program demonstrates Microsoft's continued commitment to working closely with customers to help shape the future of Windows. Windows Insiders will be able to give feedback on early builds of the product throughout the development cycle. The program will include various ways for Windows Insiders to engage in a two-way dialogue with Microsoft, including a Windows Feedback app for sharing suggestions and issues and a Windows Technical Preview Forum for interacting with Microsoft engineers and fellow Insiders. More information on the Windows Insider Program and the technical preview can be found here.

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129 Comments on Microsoft Announces Windows 10 Operating System

#101
Ahhzz
Hilux SSRGThis feature alone will be a price for admission for many users and it runs well in the technical preview right now. :rockout:
It would be if they allowed you to dedicate cores to a desktop! :)
Posted on Reply
#102
remixedcat
R-T-BWindows 8 has something, though it isn't quite Aero (and it performs better as such).
DWM so it still uses composititor but not glass.
Posted on Reply
#103
Octopuss
Bleh, I really like how Win7 looks. I lived most of my life on classic Windows 2000-like settings, and with 7 I started to enjoy some visual eye candy :P
Posted on Reply
#104
Steevo
R-T-BLinux is still the Linux kernel. What, were you expecting a rewrite from scratch? Only colossal fucksups (ie, the 9x series) mandate that.

Oh, and the best OS ironically in the 98ish era wasn't 98 or 2000. It was a little known OS known as IBM OS/2 Warp 4. Miles ahead but almost immediately killed upon release, because the company knew they had lost and wouldn't even preload it on their own hardware.
It used roughly the same kernel as windows did (also the reason its never became open source), which was a bloated top heavy unsecured beauty, and why we had such a huge rash of networms and other security exploits, any driver that was kernel level or loaded or hooked protected memory could install itself along side the kernel and intercept data, and it was so easy to do it if I haven't mentioned that before. All you had to do is create and load a driver in .sys format that loaded in whatever was left of the lowmem, usually at least half to a third was left, create a pool of reserved memory and run whatever badness you desired, from keylogging, to remote connections, a new boot sector, that may or may not format your drive.

I only got to use it for awhile on green screen emulators before we moved away to Win 98 and 2000.
Posted on Reply
#105
R-T-B
SteevoIt used roughly the same kernel as windows did (also the reason its never became open source), which was a bloated top heavy unsecured beauty, and why we had such a huge rash of networms and other security exploits, any driver that was kernel level or loaded or hooked protected memory could install itself along side the kernel and intercept data, and it was so easy to do it if I haven't mentioned that before. All you had to do is create and load a driver in .sys format that loaded in whatever was left of the lowmem, usually at least half to a third was left, create a pool of reserved memory and run whatever badness you desired, from keylogging, to remote connections, a new boot sector, that may or may not format your drive.

I only got to use it for awhile on green screen emulators before we moved away to Win 98 and 2000.
Are you refering to OS/2? Because everything con-wise you mentioned was present in Windows 9x as well re the security model.

As for being bloated and top-heavy and "roughly same kernel as Windows," that's all 100% false. The kernel was independently developed at IBM, and I ran Warp 4 on a 486 and it was actually SNAPPY. Granted, I had 32MBs of ram in that 486 which was largely unheard of back then, but point stands.
Posted on Reply
#106
AsRock
TPU addict
ssdproI said before, metro/modern sucks from a productivity standpoint - give ME the option of old interface. I will stay consistent and agree with you, keep metro/modern and give YOU the choice.
Yup, as i said in another w10 thread that MS should of added XP \ 7\ 8 looks options to please more people young or old who don't want or have time keep learning were shit has been moved too.
Posted on Reply
#107
MxPhenom 216
ASIC Engineer
TheMailMan78As long as they don't dump metro for an antiqued interface Ill be happy. I want the option to keep metro. Curious to see what security improvements they bring in Win10.
That's what I want. I have come to love metro/modern UI. Find it hard to go back.
Posted on Reply
#108
Solaris17
Super Dainty Moderator
Why do we have to use this thread because it was made news when the other one was 7 pages long with useful information?
Posted on Reply
#109
Scrizz
Solaris17Why do we have to use this thread because it was made news when the other one was 7 pages long with useful information?
^THIS!
Posted on Reply
#110
remixedcat
Solaris17Why do we have this thread because it was made news when the other one was 7 pages long with useful information?
Yeah this thread is the general one and the other was our experinces
Posted on Reply
#111
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
We can merge threads, but it takes someone who's a mod/admin of both threads.

for something like windows 10 which will have many news articles in its time, one thread made more sense to me (but i wasnt involved in its closure, or whatever happened to it)
Posted on Reply
#112
xenocide
The News section also gets much more traffic.
Posted on Reply
#113
remixedcat
thing is a buncha tech help for windows 10 might not flow well if people are just talking about the other crap with it. There should be a "general" and a "support/experience" thread like before. Both threads flowed differently.
Posted on Reply
#118
95Viper
An interesting article over at MaximumPC --> Microsoft Explains Key Logging Activities in Windows 10 Technical Preview
'You agreed to it, sucka!'

Complaints are starting to roll in that the Windows 10 Technical Preview is overstepping its bounds with the amount of information it collects, and some have even categorized the OS as a keylogger of sorts.

Turns out it's true -- the Windows 10 Technical Preview does record keystrokes in certain situations, and it also mines quite a bit of personal data. However, Microsoft contends that these methods are all laid out in the Terms of Use -- the fine print filled with legalese that we all make sure to read, right? -- and by downloading and installing the software, you agreed to the data collection.

"When you acquire, install and use the Program, Microsoft collects information about you, your devices, applications and networks, and your use of those devices, applications and networks," Microsoft states.
Microsoft goes on to give examples of the data it collects, which includes your name, email address, preferences and interests, browsing, search and file history, phone call and SMS data, device configuration and sensor data, and application usage. However, it's this entry that has people comparing the Technical Preview to a keylogger: "When you open a file, we may collect information about the file, the application used to open the file and how long it takes and use it for purposes such as improving performance; or enter text, we may collect typed characters and use them for purposes such as improving auto-complete and spell check features," Microsoft explains.
Posted on Reply
#119
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
95ViperAn interesting article over at MaximumPC --> Microsoft Explains Key Logging Activities in Windows 10 Technical Preview
They want to know how a bug occurred and the best way to know that is recording everything. That doesn't mean I agree with it though, I just understand the cases where such data collection could be useful for developers but it's clearly a power that could be abused easily.
Posted on Reply
#120
remixedcat
This is why I'm testing it in a VM on a seperate VLAN and on my laptop it's on a different VLAN as well. Also using fresh accounts to manage logins and also gonna change the Guest VLAN SSID password after I'm done with testing.
Posted on Reply
#121
Nordic
I have win10 on a crunching rig.. If microsoft wanted to steal my WCG login and crunch for me on some of their servers I wouldn't mind. Otherwise they won't get anything useful.
Posted on Reply
#122
...PACMAN...
Anyone know a similar program to CPUz that will work on the technical preview? Can't get CPUz to work.
Posted on Reply
#125
Nordic
...PACMAN...Anyone know a similar program to CPUz that will work on the technical preview? Can't get CPUz to work.
remixedcatsame here can't seem to get one that works.

Also on the following site: alternativeto.net/software/speccy/

DO NOT GET THIS APP:


Webroot detected that devs site as malware
What do you see with cpuz and or speccy? Hwinfo works. If its clockspeed the task manager works for that too
Posted on Reply
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