Windows 10 All-in-One For Dummies. Woody Leonhard

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Windows 10 All-in-One For Dummies - Woody  Leonhard


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you can’t, chances are pretty good that what you need is available in Chromebook land. No, you won’t find Photoshop, but you will find plenty of cheap photo-editing packages. No, you won’t find the full-blown Office suite, but you can use Office Online. I’ve moved almost everything to Google Docs and Sheets and rarely turn back to the big guns.

      Chromebooks are a breath of fresh air if you don’t absolutely need any Windows-based programs. I use mine all the time, and suggest you try it, too.

If you don’t have a powerful video card, and you’re running a desktop system, you can get one for less than $100, and extra memory costs a pittance. I’ve upgraded dozens of PCs from XP to Windows 10, and the performance improvement is quite noticeable. You, laptop users, aren’t so lucky because the graphics card is usually soldered in.

      Better video

      Windows 10 doesn’t sport the Aero interface made popular in Vista and Windows 7, but some of the Aero improvements persist. The new Windows 10 reveal feature lights up items as you hover your cursor over them if that sort of thing appeals.

The Snap Assist feature in Windows 10 lets you drag a window to an edge of the screen and have it automatically resize to half-screen size — a boon to anyone with a wide screen. Sounds like a parlor trick, but it’s a capability I use many times every day. You can even snap to the four corners of the screen, and the desktop shows you which open programs can be clicked to fill in the open spot (see Figure 2-4).

Snapshot of the dragging a window to the edge or a corner, and the other available windows appear, ready for you to click into place.

      FIGURE 2-4: Drag a window to the edge or a corner, and the other available windows appear, ready for you to click into place.

      Windows 10’s desktop shows you thumbnails of running programs when you hover your mouse cursor over a program on the taskbar (see Figure 2-4).

      Video efficiency is also substantially improved: If you have a video that drips and drops in Windows XP, the same video running on the same hardware may go straight through in Windows 10.

      A genuinely better browser is emerging

      Internet Explorer lives in Windows 10, but it’s buried deep. If you’re lucky, you’ll never see it when you use Windows 10. Internet Explorer is old and buggy, and Microsoft has stopped developing it. It became a bloated slug with incredibly stupid and infection-prone “features”: ActiveX, COM extensions, custom crap-filled toolbars, and don’t get me started on Silverlight. It deserves to die if only in retaliation for all the infections it’s brought to millions of machines.

      In its place, the new, light, standards-happy, fast Microsoft Edge is everything Internet Explorer should have been, without the legacy garbage. Microsoft built Edge from the ground up as a Windows 10 app that runs on the desktop in its own resizable window. It’s a poster boy for the new apps that are coming down the pike. It took Microsoft forever to build, but the final result is well worth the effort.

      Unfortunately, Microsoft Edge is still an unfinished work. Few people use it because it lacks many important browser features. The situation’s slowly improving, and Microsoft has just launched a revamped version based on the same rendering engine as Google Chrome. Unfortunately, this new version is not built into Windows 10 yet. You have to download it from www.microsoft.com/en-us/edge. Edge might well be ready for prime time at some point.

      If you live in fear of Internet Explorer getting you infected and/or hate the massive patches that used to appear every month, Microsoft Edge will be a refreshing change.

      Cortana

      Cortana never took off, and it was used a lot less than Siri or Google Assistant. Because of that, Microsoft decided to decouple it from the rest of Windows 10, and as of the May 2020 update, it is a separate entity. It no longer takes over Windows 10’s search, and you can ignore it if you want. However, if you do enable it, it sits in the background, listening for your commands.

      I tell you much more about Cortana in this book — she has a chapter all to herself, Book 3, Chapter 5 — but I’ll drop a little tidbit here, tailored for those Windows XP fans among you who may just be a bit intimidated by a talking helper-droid.

      You see, Cortana has a history.

Snapshot of the Cortana sits, listening, and watching, waiting to help you. That should either make you skeptical or scared – or a little of both.

      FIGURE 2-5: Cortana sits, listening, and watching, waiting to help you. That should either make you skeptical or scared — or a little of both.

      

Right now, depending on how you measure, Cortana is likely the least intelligent of the assistants, with Google Assistant on top, and Siri and Alexa vying for second place. That may change over time. In fact, someday Cortana may scan this paragraph and call me to task for my impertinence — bad blot on my record, served up to our robotic overlords.

      Other improvements

      Many other features — not as sexy as Cortana but every bit as useful — put Windows 10 head and shoulders above Windows XP. The standout features include:

       The taskbar: I know many XP users swear by the old Quick Launch toolbar, but the taskbar, after you get to know it, runs rings around its predecessor. Just one example is shown in Figure 2-3 earlier in this chapter.

        A backup worthy of the name: Backup was a cruel joke in Windows XP. Windows 7 did it better, but Windows 10 makes backup truly easy, particularly with File History (see Book 8, Chapter 1).

       A less-infested notification area: Windows XP let any program and its brother put an icon in the notification area near the system clock. Windows 10 severely limits the number of icons that appear and gives you a spot to click if you really want to see them all. Besides, notifications are supposed to go in the Action pane on the right. See Book 2, Chapter 3.

       Second monitor support: Although some video card manufacturers managed to jury-rig multiple monitor support into the Windows XP drivers, Windows 10 makes using multiple monitors one-click easy.

       Easy wireless networking:


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