I’ve got the technical preview of Windows 10 up and running on some spare hardware. The process was painless on a Core 2 Duo with only 2GB of RAM and took less than 15 minutes including logging into my Microsoft account and the syncing of settings. Here are my screenshots showing features that differ from Win 8.1. (Not shown: The fact that you can resize the start menu vertically and additional tiles will expand it to the right.)
Michael Sauers is the Director of Logan Library in Logan, UT. Prior to this he was one of the founding staff and Technology Manager for Do Space in Omaha, NE. After earning his MLS in 1995 from the University at Albany's School of Information Science and Policy Michael spent his first 20 years as a librarian training other librarians in technology along with time as a public library trustee, a bookstore manager for a library friends group, a reference librarian, a technology consultant, and a bookseller. He has written dozens of articles for various journals and magazines and has published 14 books ranging from library technology, blogging, Web design, and an index to a popular horror magazine. In his spare time, he blogs at TravelinLibrarian.info, runs The Collector's Guide to Dean Koontz website at CollectingKoontz.com, takes many, many photos, and typically reads more than 100 books a year.
Unless otherwise stated, all opinions are my own and are not to be considered those of the City of Logan, UT.
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5 Replies to “Windows 10 Technical Preview screenshots”
But isn’t Windows 10 like 9 all online, if so I’ll keep 8.
Sorry, that is not correct. 10 is what 9 was expected to be, just named 10. And, I’m not sure what you mean by “all online.”
When
I say online, I mean in the Cloud. As that’s what the Cloud is online, not on PC. You don’t own anything you pay to use it each month..
Windows 10, at this point, and I have read nothing to indicate otherwise, is not a cloud OS. I downloaded it, burned it to a DVD, and installed it on a blank machine. So far all indications are that 8.1 users will get 10 through the Windows Update process (just like moving from 8 to 8.1) but that doesn’t make it a cloud OS.
I hpe Windows 10 not in te Cloud, but for now I’ll stick wit 8 and wat for more input.
But isn’t Windows 10 like 9 all online, if so I’ll keep 8.
Sorry, that is not correct. 10 is what 9 was expected to be, just named 10. And, I’m not sure what you mean by “all online.”
When
I say online, I mean in the Cloud. As that’s what the Cloud is online, not on PC. You don’t own anything you pay to use it each month..
Windows 10, at this point, and I have read nothing to indicate otherwise, is not a cloud OS. I downloaded it, burned it to a DVD, and installed it on a blank machine. So far all indications are that 8.1 users will get 10 through the Windows Update process (just like moving from 8 to 8.1) but that doesn’t make it a cloud OS.
I hpe Windows 10 not in te Cloud, but for now I’ll stick wit 8 and wat for more input.