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What is actually useful about Windows 10 released today (not justhype)?
On 2015-08-02 11:24 AM, Al Drake wrote:
On 8/2/2015 11:16 AM, A.M wrote: On 2015-08-02 5:24 AM, Ron wrote: On 8/2/2015 12:26 AM, A.M wrote: On 2015-08-01 11:42 PM, EGK wrote: On Sun, 02 Aug 2015 04:52:28 +0200, Steve Hayes wrote: On Sat, 1 Aug 2015 14:32:49 +0000 (UTC), "D. F. Manno" wrote: Steve Hayes wrote in message What Windows 7 users need to know about updating to Windows 10 http://mashable.com/2015/07/30/windo...de-windows-10/ Here's my take on that nice article: 1. The "Start Menu" is back in Windows 10 2. Windows 7 "Gadget" is gone in Windows 10 3. Windows 7 "Windows Media Center" is gone in Windows 10 4. Windows 10 Pro has "Update for Business" 5. Windows 10 Pro has "Domain Join Services" 6. Windows 10 Pro has "BitLocker Drive Encryption" 7. Windows 10 Pro has "Group Policy editor" 8. Windows 10 Pro has "Remote Access Services" 9. Windows 10 has "DirectX 12 graphics API" 10. Windows 10 has game streaming from Xbox One 11. Windows 10 has "Cortana", the voice assistant 12. You have only 1 month to decide if you want to revert Is any of that useful for the average Windows 7 user? Yes: it tells me that there's nothing there that I actually want. If it said "Windows 10 has built-in support for Blu-Ray discs" I might look at it again. I believe they even removed DVD playback but you can still install VLC. lol https://www.thurrott.com/windows/win...en-you-upgrade DVD playback. “Watching DVDs requires separate playback software,” Microsoft notes. But I assume any existing DVD playback software will continue running. And in a separate FAQ, Microsoft says it is “providing a free DVD playback app in Windows 10 for Windows Media Center users.” Microsoft Edge has some decent malware protection actually. I ventured onto a site with illegal streams to watch UFC tonight, fully expecting that one of the ads was going to attempt to serve me malware. Edge detected that the site had a "programming error" and warned me about the malware. Quite impressive considering that Internet Explorer used to be the best way through which to get malware onto a person's computer. Chrome and adblocker. #34 secconds I refuse to use anything made by Google. I would have used Opera with Ghostery (which blocks more than enough ads from displaying) but I also refuse to install Flash in general. Of course, since Flash is necessary to watch those illegal streams, I used Microsoft Edge because it's being forced down my throat and has Flash built-in. I was impressed with the malware blocking but the browser is useless without something to block tracking cookies. Why not use something to hide who you are? https://www.hidemyass.com/pricing I used to do that but I lost interest. -- A.M |
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