Windows Technical Preview  

1031 members have voted

  1. 1. On a scale of 1-5, 1 being worst, 5 being best. What do you think of Windows 10 from the leaks so far?

    • 5.Great, best OS ever
      156
    • 4. Pretty Good, needs a lot of minor tweaks
      409
    • 3. OK, Needs a few major improvements, some minor ones
      168
    • 2. Fine, Needs a lot of major improvements
      79
    • 1.Poor, Needs too many improvements, all hope is lost, never going to use it
      41
  2. 2. Based on the recent leaks by Neowin and Winfuture.de, my next OS upgrade will be?

    • Windows 10
      720
    • Windows 8
      20
    • Windows 7
      48
    • Sticking with XP
      3
    • OSX Yosemite
      35
    • Linux
      24
    • Sticking with OSX Mavericks
      3
  3. 3. Should Microsoft give away Windows 10 for free?

    • Yes for Windows 8.1 Users
      305
    • Yes for Windows 7 and above users
      227
    • Yes for Vista and above users
      31
    • Yes for XP and above users
      27
    • Yes for all Windows users
      192
    • No
      71


Recommended Posts

Trolling

 

The more people start to like Windows 10 in this thread, the more his anger comes out. His last few posts have been nothing more than bait IMHO. He's getting more annoyed with people who don't like the same as him. Becoming a familiar thing among the Windows 10 haters the closer it gets to RTM.

 

Then you have people that won't switch to Windows 10 all because of the icons. They love everything else, but the icons cause them to stay away. That's beyond belief right there. Something they can easily change when it's released and that's a deal breaker. More like laziness IMHO.

well in all honesty, the icons were WAY over saturated, you could tell they were place holders how bright the colors were... but it's amazing people can't tell a place holder set by the appearances... the yellows were so bright they almost turned orange the blues made Cyan look dull :rofl: but anyone who knows windows knows you can alter the icons if you don't like them

Then you have people that won't switch to Windows 10 all because of the icons. They love everything else, but the icons cause them to stay away. That's beyond belief right there. Something they can easily change when it's released and that's a deal breaker. More like laziness IMHO.

Such people should not be involved in the Insider Program, IMHO.

 

As I have mentioned many times, I really like windows 10 and believe it will be well accepted by the desktop work community, when it is "set up" as a desktop work environment. My question to the many network administrators on Neowin.... would you allow most of these "apps" to be present on your "secure" setup for your companies infrastructure? The point being, if your answer is mostly "yes", I will accept the direction that Microsoft has taken. On the other hand, if the answer was mostly "no", I would be inclined to think that Microsoft should have developed 2 software environments...The stable desktop OS they presently have for commercial, and then, to put all resources to a really good cross platform mobile system to acquire new customers with the ability for porting only the most important "apps" deemed by network administrators to the desktop environment. Or, did I just answer my own question, in which we have one OS and network administrators cut out a good portion for work...I am just trying to analyse why some hate the modern UI...(puts on rain suit to receive flying eggs!)  :)

Happy Birthday!

Trolling

The more people start to like Windows 10 in this thread, the more his anger comes out. His last few posts have been nothing more than bait IMHO. He's getting more annoyed with people who don't like the same as him. Becoming a familiar thing among the Windows 10 haters the closer it gets to RTM.

Then you have people that won't switch to Windows 10 all because of the icons. They love everything else, but the icons cause them to stay away. That's beyond belief right there. Something they can easily change when it's released and that's a deal breaker. More like laziness IMHO.

I'm angry because Microsoft ruined a good thing with Windows 8.1 by throwing out the baby with the bathwater, won't even acknowledge 8.1 features people want brought back, and have turned Windows into a hot mess. Worse, it appears Microsoft is again making promises, and breaking them by shipping Windows 10 in an incomplete state.

I'm angry because Microsoft ruined a good thing with Windows 8.1 by throwing out the baby with the bathwater, won't even acknowledge 8.1 features people want brought back, and have turned Windows into a hot mess. Worse, it appears Microsoft is again making promises, and breaking them by shipping Windows 10 in an incomplete state.

While I do agree that you go sometimes a little bit to far into pushing your opinion. I have to agree that Windows 10 is, for how it stands now, a major downgrade for tablet users. Like it or not, but the Charms bar worked. So did the app switcher. The TaskView isn't as easy to use as the App Switcher. If you want to use 2 apps side-by-side in Windows 8, you swipe in from the left and have it pinned. In Windows 10, you first have to snap the current app to the side, then choose from the App Switcher which app you want, it just feels less convinient. Windows 8 apps on Windows 10 that use the swipe gestures from the top and bottom are also broken for Windows 10. And well, the start screen is flawed too.

 

But beside that, it's becoming a great OS.

I'm angry because Microsoft ruined a good thing with Windows 8.1 by throwing out the baby with the bathwater

For clarity, what was the bathwater again?

 

Charms never worked well, and when it did it was never better enough to justify it over other onscreen options (ie search).  Taskview, once tweaked, will be better than the App Switcher for the majority of people.  While I liked the fun factor of that gesture (much like the browser), having it default to 'next app' on swipe confused many, let alone the backward movement to get to the app list itself.  I'm sure there will be some customization around those gestures for power swipers, be patient.

Missing from Windows 10:

Proper tablet mode

modern task switcher

SMS on desktop

OneDrive 

modern file exploerer

Tablet mode exist and it works damn good. Modern switcher?  The whole modern concept was left with Windows 8 era. Modern DOES NOT exist in WIN10! Accept and MOVE ON. Also the new Win10 task switcher is the best one to date. Way better than anything before. Modern file explorer? I'm not gona repeat myself with the silly modern concept. Put simply its dead. Explorer Works fine and doesnt need to be change. One drive?...yeah

Tablet mode exist and it works damn good. Modern switcher?  The whole modern concept was left with Windows 8 era. Modern DOES NOT exist in WIN10! Accept and MOVE ON. Also the new Win10 task switcher is the best one to date. Way better than anything before. Modern file explorer? I'm not gona repeat myself with the silly modern concept. Put simply its dead. Explorer Works fine and doesnt need to be change. One drive?...yeah

Explorer sucks with touch. It's outdated. Many people still believe in Modern concepts, and are actively fighting for it on Feedback. Explorer is a big one.

 

Also, if Modern is dead, what exactly do you call all the new apps and features of Windows 10? They're certainly not reverts back to classic Windows 7.

Explorer sucks with touch. It's outdated. Many people still believe in Modern concepts, and are actively fighting for it on Feedback. Explorer is a big one.

Outdated HOW!? I use it on my Surface Pro 3 and it works fine. What more do you need from explorer?

Windows 10 has certainly improved stand by times on my HP Stream 7. It wouldn't last for 12hrs with 8.1 but now I am doing close to 24hrs of stand by. I guess the battery saver thing is coming handy.

For clarity, what was the bathwater again?

 

Charms never worked well, and when it did it was never better enough to justify it over other onscreen options (ie search).  Taskview, once tweaked, will be better than the App Switcher for the majority of people.  While I liked the fun factor of that gesture (much like the browser), having it default to 'next app' on swipe confused many, let alone the backward movement to get to the app list itself.  I'm sure there will be some customization around those gestures for power swipers, be patient.

He is talking about tablets. Charms worked beautifully and so did the swipe-from-left switcher. I don't mind the  new switcher but it is one extra click if I am using two apps on my 7" tablets.

Outdated HOW!? I use it on my Surface Pro 3 and it works fine. What more do you need from explorer?

Touch friendly features, and gestures. I can't use it at all on my Surface with my finger.

I wouldn't make such a big think out of Cortana on other platforms, they'll never be as integrated as it can be on Windows itself, there's going to be limitations by the fact it's a app and nothing more.  The level at which Cortana on Windows 10 hooks into the OS and other apps will be something you don't see on the Android and iOS apps.  What it does do is adds another app/service to draw users in and then make it easier for them to switch to a Windows device.  One of the reasons, besides the app gap, is that users are often tied into using some specific Apple or Google service/app and won't switch to another platform because of that.   If you're deep into using Apples stuff you're not going to switch to Android either, but if you start to use more Google services then switching to Android makes more sense.  It's the same idea from MS' point of view, get them using all our services, work on the app gap, and then win them over.

 

It's the only thing they can do at this point.

Cortana on other platforms is a BIG problem - for the competition (read Google Now and Siri).  Remember, my big complaint about both is that neither accepts input in any way other than voice - that's a BIG problem for hardware that isn't a phone (or ANY platform being used where speaking is a no-no, such as libraries and other "quiet zones").  Cortana - for that reason alone - is a big win (not alone on Windows, either).  In that sense, I'm platform-agnostic (though it's my Mom, not me, that is the bigger Android user - with both smartphone and tablet Android-driven) - still, it's rather monstrous that Microsoft can go onto Android AND iOS, and kick Google's AND Apple's cans - on their turf.

modern task switcher

SMS on desktop

OneDrive 

modern file exploerer

SMS will likely come with the final release of Windows Mobile since it is a Universal App and has to be working for mobile. Delaying Windows 10 for PCs just for SMS doesn't make sense. I suspect People and Messenger will be more complete in that timeframe with basics for now on PCs.

What exactly makes a modern task switcher? Task switching is a very hard problem to solve and Windows has always had 2 main ones. Taskbar and Alt-Tab. So far nothing has come out that is better at task switching than those two things. The Windows 8 version on the left wasn't any better and actually confused things more.

 

 

As I have mentioned many times, I really like windows 10 and believe it will be well accepted by the desktop work community, when it is "set up" as a desktop work environment. My question to the many network administrators on Neowin.... would you allow most of these "apps" to be present on your "secure" setup for your companies infrastructure? The point being, if your answer is mostly "yes", I will accept the direction that Microsoft has taken. On the other hand, if the answer was mostly "no", I would be inclined to think that Microsoft should have developed 2 software environments...The stable desktop OS they presently have for commercial, and then, to put all resources to a really good cross platform mobile system to acquire new customers with the ability for porting only the most important "apps" deemed by network administrators to the desktop environment. Or, did I just answer my own question, in which we have one OS and network administrators cut out a good portion for work...I am just trying to analyse why some hate the modern UI...(puts on rain suit to receive flying eggs!)  :)

 

The apps are sandboxed and highly secure. There is also a lot of control as to what apps are installed so I don't see why any of that would be a problem for Network Admins. Universal Apps are just a different programming framework much like Java and WPF. There is nothing wrong with their existence. The problems have always been features of the API more than anything else.

Desktop will be released first with more apps ported to Universal Apps because they are trying to move the common apps to a new API and platform. Mobile will be released later with updated apps that will update on desktop as well. It's a lot like the original Longhorn development. They were trying to move to WPF and XAML for all the apps but WPF was too unstable during the dev lifecycle and in the end, WPF was too slow. Universal Apps is the replacement for WPF and is stable enough now to start moving the core apps to it like Start Menu.

 

While I do agree that you go sometimes a little bit to far into pushing your opinion. I have to agree that Windows 10 is, for how it stands now, a major downgrade for tablet users. Like it or not, but the Charms bar worked. So did the app switcher. The TaskView isn't as easy to use as the App Switcher. If you want to use 2 apps side-by-side in Windows 8, you swipe in from the left and have it pinned. In Windows 10, you first have to snap the current app to the side, then choose from the App Switcher which app you want, it just feels less convinient. Windows 8 apps on Windows 10 that use the swipe gestures from the top and bottom are also broken for Windows 10. And well, the start screen is flawed too.

How did Charms ever work? I had a Surface Pro 1, I used it only for Start and Settings. Never used Share, Search, or Devices. The universal Search button has never worked well because we are too ingrained to search the web via browser. I'm sure the stats showed they hardly were used. So why Charms? I think the Action Center is a great replacement for that swipe. Maybe they need to something with Start but too be honest, there are 3-4 different ways to get there on tablets (hardware button) I don't think it matters.

App switcher was fun to swipe to multiple apps, but it actually was bad. It's much more efficient to use taskbar or Alt-Tab like features. Not sure what they are doing though with the left side since I don't have it installed on a tablet.

  • Like 1

The task switcher in Windows 10 is the same type of switcher we've had in WP, it's basically alt + tab.   It still works fine on a tablet, and it also ties into the new snap view assist feature as well.   The UI change for it makes it more consistent compared to the old 8.1 version which had it's limits.

Because Microsoft can add gestures to Explorer without changing anything to Explorer... Right.

They did add touch gestures in Windows 7. Explorer is still not optimized for use with anything other than a mouse.

Missing from Windows 10:

Proper tablet mode

modern task switcher

SMS on desktop

OneDrive 

modern file exploerer

 Ability to change the titlebar color - a feature that Windows 8 even had - albeit very minimalistic. Now its completely gone and we are stuck with the "Some like it Hoth" theme where inactive windows barely look different than active ones. Note: I am referring to the titlebar color of Win32 programs. I don't care what color Metro programs' titlebars are as I don't use them save for Settings, Feedback, and Insider Hub.

I'm angry because Microsoft ruined a good thing with Windows 8.1 by throwing out the baby with the bathwater, won't even acknowledge 8.1 features people want brought back, and have turned Windows into a hot mess. Worse, it appears Microsoft is again making promises, and breaking them by shipping Windows 10 in an incomplete state.

I certainly agree on the last point, though I think its incomplete for different reasons than you do. Windows 10 is not ready for a June or even July RTM, that is for sure. 

 

Software deadlines are a bad idea, always. As much as users hate this, the proper way is 'It's done when it's done' Microsoft never should've made that announcement that Windows 10 will launch [thus GA, which is 2 months after RTM] this summer. If anything, they should've committed only to "We hope to launch it by the end of Q4"

 

It needs a proper 4-5 months of continued beta status, followed by 1-2 months of RC, then RTM. With healthy allowances for extensions of either or both time frames to allow for bugfixing. 

 

Since the Canary ring just received build 10130* it can be safe to assume we're not on target for June RTM at least. 

Canary ring: 10.0.10130.0 OSG ring: 10.0.10125.0 External ring: 10.0.10125.0  Insider fast: 10.0.10122.0 Insider slow: 10.0.10074.0

 

Grinch, on 26 May 2015 - 22:11, said:

 

 

Hopefully a new build is released soon that fixes the issue with OpenGL games (Minecraft for example) having a rather annoying offset.

 

 

One of many examples of why Windows 10 needs more time as beta before they even think of RTM

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft making much needed change to Windows 11, 10 Patch Tuesday security updates by Sayan Sen Recently, Microsoft delivered its latest Defender patches for Windows 11 ISOs. These definitions are released from time to time alongside the general security updates available during Patch Tuesday. Speaking of Defender, the company has now announced another important change that affects how security updates are delivered to enterprise devices running Windows. According to a recent announcement, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint's endpoint detection and response (EDR) updates will no longer be bundled with the monthly Windows security updates or Patch Tuesdays. Instead the company is shifting delivery of these updates to Microsoft Update, bringing EDR servicing in line with several other Microsoft Defender components. If you recall, Microsoft last year moved PowerShell updates to Microsoft Update (MU) as well since it provides automatic updates for Microsoft products and services. Thus the move is intended to allow Microsoft to deliver EDR improvements and security enhancements independently of the OS's regular monthly update cycle; this should enable faster deployment of protection updates without requiring organizations to wait for the next Patch release. For those unfamiliar, Microsoft Defender for Endpoint's EDR capabilities are designed to help organizations detect, investigate, and respond to advanced threats across managed devices. Keeping these components updated is critical for maintaining protection against evolving attack techniques. The rollout has already began for Windows 10 devices in late May 2026 (last month) and Microsoft says it will gradually expand support to Windows 11 and the remaining supported Windows versions over the coming months. The company expects deployment across Windows 10 and Windows 11 to be completed by fall 2026 or around Q3 of this year. Once the transition is complete, EDR updates will be delivered through Microsoft Update using KB5005292, provided the required prerequisite updates have already been installed. Microsoft is also introducing a new Defender Update Service as part of the change. Following installation of the first update, devices will automatically create a new directory located at %ProgramData%\Microsoft\Microsoft Defender\Defender Update. Microsoft notes that restarts may occasionally be necessary in case of "rare" failure scenarios. For most organizations, the tech giant says no action will be required as long as Microsoft Update is already permitted within their update management strategy. Admins who rely on manually deployed update packages, however, will need to adjust their processes to ensure the new Defender update package is included. Microsoft also recommends reviewing internal documentation and notifying helpdesk and security operations teams about the updated delivery mechanism to avoid confusion during the transition. As a prerequisite, the tech giant notes that systems must be running Sense version 10.8798.25857.1000 or later and have one of the following Windows updates (or later) installed: Win11 24H2 KB5062660 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win11 23H2 KB5062663 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win11 22H2 KB5062663 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win10 22H2 KB5062649 (2025-07 Cumulative Update Preview) Win10 1809 KB5063877 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) Server 2019 KB5063877 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) Server 2022 KB5063880 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) Server 2025 KB5063878 (2025-08 Cumulative Update) As always, organizations should verify that their update policies align with the new servicing approach before the broader rollout reaches all supported Windows platforms later this year. In case of major problems, the EDR update can be rolled back to the inbox version stored in %ProgramFiles%\\Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (ATP) using: MpCmdRun.exe -RevertMde -Product Edr -ToVersion Inbox For those who have access to the Microsoft 365 Admin Center portal, you can view the message here under ID MC1381119.
    • My problem with these smart scopes is that IMO they're not really an entrance into astronomy, they're an entrance to looking at pretty(ish) pictures that you take by essentially pressing a button and letting the scope do the work. I still maintain that getting some binoculars or a solid dedicated telescope (which doesn't have to mean expensive) and actually spending time learning the night sky and using a telescope is a much better way to actually learn. But, granted, the learning curve is a bit steeper (as it tends to be).
    • I never played Crazy Taxi before, but this looks like a fun game!
    • The perception of Microsoft Edge is unfortunate as it's a world class browser. I'm not exaggerating when I say it's the best browser I've ever used with its feature set, speed, reliability and advanced security. Running the extension Ublock Origin is a must though to deal with advertising and trackers.
    • You can check out our latest 9070 GRE review with scores for the XT too, but these are on Windows: Gaming performance Productivity performance
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
    • Dedicated
      Conjor earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      493
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      248
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      73
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      69
    5. 5
      neufuse
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!