Windows 10 |
Microsoft was unsuccessful in
combining touch and desktop features in a single OS and was forced to
rush an 8.1 update that made Windows more desktop-friendly and less
annoying. Because of Windows' desktop dominance, however, most PCs sold
since have come equipped with Windows 8, a capable if somewhat
irritating OS that nobody loved.
Since Windows 8's release the PC
world has continued to evolve, including expectations for modern
operating systems. Here are some considerations that come to mind:
The walled garden model
Despite
some limitations, mobile OSes like Android and iOS have demonstrated
the level of security and control that is possible with closed
ecosystems. They have also shown that constant and major point updates
are possible without disrupting the user experience and breaking
compatibility every single time.
We
don't want a closed Windows, but the prospect of a workstation-caliber
OS that can be extended, updated and managed as easily as our handheld
devices shouldn't be too much to ask in 2015.
It's "free"
For
the first time Windows will come as a free upgrade for current users of
Windows 8.1, Windows 8, Windows Phone 8.1 and Windows 7. Once a device
is upgraded to Windows 10, it'll be supported for the lifetime of the
device. There's a bit more to it and we have an article dedicated to the topic, but the point here is simple: Windows for free is a disruption to the old model.
Tablet sales are flat
iPad sales
were skyrocketing when Windows 8 came out. In hindsight, Microsoft felt
the urgency to adapt Windows under the impression that not only mobiles
but tablets were the next big thing. Today tablet sales have plateaued, nowhere near replacing laptops or workstation PCs, and the Surface has proven a successful hybrid device that is at its best when running full Windows like a normal PC.
Windows 10 is finalized but it's not "done"
Can
Windows 10 bring seamless updates that one or two years from now will
make it the best, most polished desktop OS available, and still be
called Windows 10? Microsoft must prove itself under this new direction.
The ongoing Insider program is a good sign of things to come, but
historically the company has not been known for rapid iterations, so
we'll see.
To draw a comparison, Apple's OS X has not received
any earth-shaking overhauls in years. Instead, it's been a constant
stream of polish and small to medium-sized features, some of them not
even user-facing. Even with Apple fully controlling the hardware that
runs OS X, it's still far from perfect. Windows is just getting started
on a similar venture.
The Setup
This review is largely
based on my experience using Windows 10 on a desktop PC, so I've been
treating Windows 10 like most computer enthusiasts will: as a direct
upgrade from Windows 7/8 on my custom-built machine, just as I did with
7, Vista, XP, 2k, and other previous Windows releases.
I've
been using Windows 10 Preview versions for months. In the process I've
upgraded my main PC to the final Windows 10 code (from the Preview
builds), clean installed it on a second desktop machine and dual-booted
my MacBook Pro -- the latter mostly to see how the OS fares on high DPI
screens and it looks pretty good from setup to actual usage thanks to
the existence of Surface Pros.
What's New: Feature Highlights and Impressions
The Start Menu
Start
is back as I'm sure you've heard and fortunately it's the most useful
and sleek looking Start menu we've seen to date. The remains of the
Start screen show up to the right (more about that in a second) but the
big tiles are the least important element of the returning Start menu in
my opinion.
Microsoft iterated a ton during Preview builds until
they hit a solid, truly convenient set of shortcuts in a condensed
menu. The 'Most used' apps with jump lists are a godsend. When you've
installed a new program it will also show up here. Then you get five
handy shortcuts: your user account, the File Explorer, settings, power,
and access to all programs in scrollable alphabetical order.
The
Metro-style tiles on the right can be moved and grouped. When these are
customized to your liking, they can be useful though I'm still not a
fan of how much space they take or how they look for regular apps that
merely show a small centered icon.
Live
tiles can also be shown here, and while they can be visually appealing
and show some information on the fly, I've never found them practical
for anything beyond a weather tile and maybe a news/stock ticker.
Cortana and Windows Search that works
Windows
10's default UI shows the Start button next to a big search box for
Cortana and the Task View icon. It's clear Microsoft wants to make these
core features as obvious as possible to new users.
The Cortana
search box in particular takes a ton of precious taskbar space that
could otherwise be dedicated to apps that are pinned or running, so I
wouldn't be surprised if most power users collapsed Cortana search to a
regular icon or hide it altogether. As with previous versions of
Windows, search is still accessible by hitting the Windows key (shows
the Start Menu) and typing your query.
I'm
pleased to report Windows 10 finally brings local file search you can
consistently rely on. And it's fast, too. Looking up apps or files works
effortlessly which is saying a lot considering Windows search has been
broken since Vista. System settings can be looked up contextually and
apps are shown highlighted as the first search result after hitting only
a few keystrokes.
The
digital assistant side of Cortana has been inherited from Windows
Phone. Similar to Siri and Google Now in mobile devices, once you allow
Cortana access to your data and location it will show you topics of
interest, remind you of scheduled events along with hearing your voice
and accepting voice commands. It's a new foray for Windows and one that
likely has a bright future ahead. I still think mobiles have the upside
of being with you all the time and leveraging geographic data to show
more relevant information. That's likely the reason Microsoft is set to
launch Cortana for iOS and Android devices soon, so it can combine desktop and mobile data to your benefit.
Task View
Window
management has been improved, accounting for both desktops/laptops as
well as touch devices. The OS X Expose-like Task View works well and
brings support for virtual desktops. The latter is a valuable addition
to Windows' feature stash as thousands of users have relied on
third-party virtual desktop solutions for over a decade.
Moving
windows around and pinning them to half or a quarter of the screen
works well and can be done by dragging or with the Windows + arrow keys.
Once you get used to the idea of having these options, it can make your
life easier when you want to work with two or more windows side by
side.
No more Charms bar, welcome Action Center!
Sometimes
removing a bad feature is as good as adding a new one and I'm happy to
report that Windows 8's hot corners or the terrible Charms bar is gone.
Excellent!
Windows 10 combines some of the functionality
previously found in Charms, hardware-related settings, and app
notifications on the new supercharged Action Center. Accessible from a
taskbar icon, a right pane slides into place showing notifications like
we are used to see in all mobile platforms. The addition feels pretty
natural to Windows and once third-party developers adapt their software
to use the Action Center it will be central to how you get notifications
in an orderly manner (no more balloon tip notifications, thank you).
The
Action Center also gives quick access to certain features depending on
the device you are using: Bluetooth, screen brightness, power settings,
Wi-Fi, airplane mode, enabling tablet mode, taking notes (using the free
Onenote app), access to all settings and more.
Good looks
Most
UI elements in Windows 10 tend to be as visually pleasing as they are
functional until you stumble on the OS' lack of consistency (more on
that later). The dark UI and transparencies are not distracting and
don't feel gimmicky. I would dare to say this is a rare hit for
Microsoft, which has traditionally favored corny blues and bright flower
wallpapers. You can expect beautiful wallpapers, lock screens and
icons.
Windows Hello
Windows
Hello introduces biometric authentication to Windows using your face,
fingerprint or iris. Although PCs will need a depth camera for Windows
Hello to work fully, besides the cost I don't see why new laptops and
tablets won't incorporate this eventually across the board. For current
users, logging in using your fingerprint is now built into the OS and a
new option to log in using a PIN saves the day for the rest of us.
You
may recall Windows 8 forcefully encouraged users to use your Microsoft
account to log in to Windows, so it could also connect you to Onedrive
and other cloud services. While the intention was good, it was a real
hassle typing a complex password over and over if you locked your PC
several times a day. This brings a much needed and welcomed improvement.
Microsoft Edge
Microsoft
Edge is still too new to be a proven platform. For now it's a barebones
browser that appears competent and speedy for users who don't swear by
Chrome or Firefox already. Edge reminds me of Chrome's early days,
focusing on speed and simplicity over features. The dark theme looks
pretty good here, too.
After
reading mixed reports in the past couple of weeks about how Edge
compared favorably against other browsers in benchmarks and also how it
becomes unstable when opening over two dozen tabs, I tried hammering it
with graphics-heavy websites, shopping sites and other sites I use daily
while playing a YouTube video. It didn't flinch. I honestly like Edge,
even if I won't use it as my daily driver because Lastpass is a
must-have for what I do.
Now, if Microsoft can keep up with standards and make Edge extensible, I see a future for it.
New built-in apps
I
don't consider built-in applications like Maps, Photos, Mail or Music
core to the Windows experience in a way that it can make or break the
operating system. With a plethora of third party apps to choose from,
I'm sure you already have your favorites and it's not necessarily the
stuff that comes with Windows.
I realize some apps have been way
improved since Windows 8 and it's necessary for a modern operating
system to offer an email client and other essentials so you can get
going from scratch, though I didn't spend enough time with them to offer
a thorough assessment.
I
briefly tried Calendar because it can now synchronize with Google
Calendar and Cortana can remind me of events. I also find it cool that
Onenote is now free. I've heard really good things about Photos, for
example, but I'm already on Picasa, so no thanks. Mail? Outlook, Postbox
or just plain Gmail. Music? Spotify and Pandora. Video? VLC, baby (note
however that the Video app saves you a ton of battery life in laptops and tablets).
Evidently Edge is a whole different animal and that's why I spent much more time testing it.
DirectX 12, Xbox integration
DirectX 12 is a big deal for gamers and it will run on existing computers, smartphones and even the Xbox One… all running Windows 10.
Many
people are eager to see how the API will improve the performance of
games that implement it, especially on systems with powerful CPUs and
GPUs. Earlier this year Futuremark showed a best-case scenario
where Microsoft's new API was several times faster than DX11, but of
course that was for a single theoretical test designed to max draw calls
per second. The notion is that game developers will be able to optimize
PC games the same way they do in consoles by leveraging DX12's
lower-level abstraction for closer to the metal access of GPU hardware.
Now we'll have to wait for the first titles that take full advantage of
it.
Microsoft
is touting deep integration with Xbox into Windows 10, too. The Xbox
app lets you view your friends and achievements, send messages and even
record gameplay from your PC. Very neat stuff for Xbox gamers and
there's even more advanced functionality planned.
In the upcoming
game Fable Legends, there will be the option of cross-platform gameplay
so console gamers will be pitted against PC players. There's also
streaming to PC. If your Xbox is hooked up to a TV and someone else is
using it, you can stream games from your Xbox One to a Windows 10
desktop PC, laptop, or tablet in your local network and play games using
an Xbox controller. I didn't test the feature but I hear it works
pretty well.
The Stuff That Isn't There Yet
Lack of cohesiveness
Windows
10 is worlds better than its predecessor in this regard as there's no
longer a hard divide between Metro and desktop. That line has been
blurred enough that you can't see it but Windows 10's design language is
still in transition, still in between the present and what it wants for
the future. It will hardly bother you the way Windows 8 did and it's
more handsome than Windows 7, but it's still not there yet.
I recreated a Reddit pic that showed this lack of consistency with context menus using the RTM build to show where we're at…
Two Control Panels
The
Settings screen is the new default menu to tweak settings. It remains a
bland alternative that I personally don't like much. I understand
Microsoft keeps going in this direction because it needs bigger fonts
and UI elements to consistently show the same settings across devices,
big and small. The Control Panel is still a necessity for some tasks and
remains available if you need it, but eventually it will have to go and
Settings will be mature enough to serve all our needs in a unified
panel.
Windows Store, Universal Apps and Continuum
First,
a disclaimer: the Windows Store will "reopen" its doors to Universal
Apps on launch day (July 29th) so the quality and selection of apps is
bound to get better.
Universal Apps is all about running the same
binary on Windows 10 powered devices which includes phones, tablets,
desktops, as well as Xbox, Raspberry Pi and Hololens. We've seen some
Microsoft showcases aimed at developers where they claim you can share
the same codebase and with minor modifications get yourself an app that
will run natively on all Windows 10 devices.
Presently the
Windows Store is filled with Metro apps inherited from the Windows 8
days. Top apps show popular names like Netflix, Facebook, Dropbox,
Amazon, VLC and Photoshop Express, however none of these are native
desktop applications but touch-friendly alternatives that I'd guess are
better suited to beginner users who for some reason don't care enough
about Amazon's full web experience to launch a browser. It is no
coincidence that none of the top 20 apps are scored higher than 3.9,
with most scoring in the mid to low 3s.
With
Universal Apps, Microsoft hopes to lure developers to add their AAA
titles to the Store. In other words, a true Windows Store should be as
substantial and broad as Steam is for PC gaming. Where you can find
anything and everything, free or paid, and be able to get it with a few
clicks. Deals wouldn't hurt either.
Finally, Continuum. An
interesting feature that goes hand in hand with the availability of
Universal Apps and how they can fluidly become phone, tablet and desktop
friendly applications depending on the format and device you are using.
For example, if you are using a Surface 3 tablet, going from laptop
mode with the keyboard attachment to no keyboard, will have Windows 10
switch to Tablet Mode and all running apps adapt accordingly to the new
input method, switch to portrait if necessary, and continue to display
the information you were seeing before with as little change as
possible.
Earlier this year Microsoft also showed Continuum but
going from a Windows-powered smartphone to the desktop. There was
Powerpoint and Outlook running on a phone, then by connecting that phone
to a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse, and to an HDMI monitor, you got a
desktop-like experience out of your phone's hardware albeit more limited
in nature.
Occasional Hiccups
All in
all, I would say Windows 10's performance and overall user experience is
solid. I should also mention that we are working on a full CPU and GPU
performance review with results from productivity tools, synthetic
benchmarks and gaming.
In the meantime, the desktop machine I've
used to test the last few builds of Windows 10 (while working nearly
full-time on it) has not BSOD'd or shown me any major weirdness in the
last couple of months except for a build three weeks ago when CPU usage
would spike and remain high until I rebooted. That hasn't happened with
the finalized code.
The
only other hiccup I still find regularly is with File Explorer's
frequent folder and recent files. Those are useful additions and I like
that they are shown by default upon launching the Explorer, however
there's still some optimization left to be done. Every once in a while
I'd launch File Explorer and it would show a "working on it" message for
two to six seconds until it finished opening. That's unacceptable in my
book and hopefully easy to solve.
Best Windows Yet?
It's
a tough job meeting the expectation of novice, touch, business and
power users. This is Microsoft's best effort yet and it started off on
the right foot by admitting that Windows 8's divorce of Metro and
desktop environments was one of its worst ideas ever.
There's a
running joke about how every year Apple presents a new iPhone they call
it the best iPhone ever made. Kool-Aid aside, paying customers should
indeed expect the latest product to be the absolute best, but software
is complex and operating systems often fail to meet expectations.
Microsoft knows this from experience after some terribly ugly launches:
Windows ME, Windows Vista and to a certain extent Windows 8.
Windows 10 is the best Windows you can run today.
This
alone should make it a big win, not to mention the fact that it's
"free." However I don't think Windows 10 is there yet. It is better than 7, 8 and 8.1, but Microsoft can't afford to rest on its laurels the way it has so many times before.
Windows
10 must be relentlessly updated, build after build, leveraging Insider
rings until the end of the year and later into 2016 to achieve real
polish across the board. Only then we'll be able to say Windows is the
best PC operating system, not just by default.
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