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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people feel that losing Adobe Reader (and other browser add-ins) in Microsoft Edge is a bad thing. I disagree strongly. Reader (and Flash, which is insulated in Microsoft Edge) have brought on more pain and misery — and hijacked systems — than they’re worth. Microsoft’s own ActiveX technology, which won’t run on Edge, is another malware magnet that deserves to die, as do browser helper objects, home page hijackers, custom toolbars, and much more. You can run all those add-ins in the Legacy desktop version of Internet Explorer if you absolutely must.

      Some other odd missing pieces include the following:

       ClearType doesn’t run on the Windows 10 apps’ interface, at all. It’s still on the old-fashioned desktop, but your Windows 10/Universal/Metro apps can’t use it. Note that this is different from Microsoft’s ClearType HD technology, a marketing term for the monitors on Microsoft Surface tablets. I have no idea why Microsoft used the same term for both.

       Flip 3D is gone. Little more than a parlor trick, and rarely used, the Windows key+Tab used to show a 3D rendering of all running programs and flip among them. Stick a fork in it. Now it cycles among desktops.

      

With the drubbing I gave Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 in the press — and in my For Dummies books — you might think that I’d come down hard on Windows 10.

      Nope.

      If you use a keyboard and a mouse with Windows 8 or 8.1, you need Windows 10. It’s that simple.

      Switching over to touch computing isn’t quite so clear-cut. I have a couple of touch tablets, and I review dozens more, and for simple demands — mail, web, media playing, TV casting — I still prefer Chrome OS, the driving force behind Chromebooks. It’s simpler, less prone to infuriating screw-ups, less prone to infection, and less demanding for patches.

      On the other hand, if you need one of the (many!) Windows 10 apps or Windows desktop apps that don’t run on Chrome OS, and you have a touch-first environment, Windows 10 ain’t a bad choice.

      

One thing’s for sure. This isn’t recycled old Windows 8 garbage. With Windows 10, Microsoft has taken a bold step in the right direction — one that accommodates both old desktop fogies like me and the more mobile newcomers (like me, too, I guess).

      I haven’t felt this good about a Microsoft product since the original release of Windows 7. I just wish Microsoft hadn’t pushed so hard with the Get Windows 10 campaign. It still leaves a bad taste in my mouth after all these years.

      Which Version?

      IN THIS CHAPTER

      

Crushing Windows 10 rumors that just aren’t true

      

Understanding the various versions of Windows 10

      

Narrowing your choices

      

Determining whether you have 32 bit or 64 bit

      Permit me to dispel two rumors, right off the bat. Windows 10 isn’t exactly free. And it isn’t the last version of Windows.

      

You probably heard either or both of those rumors from well-regarded mainstream publications, and what you heard was wrong.

      Here are the facts:

       From July 29, 2015 (when Win10 RTM was released) to July 29, 2016, you could upgrade from a genuine copy of Windows 7 or Windows 8.1 to Windows 10 for free. At the time this book went to press, you can’t, although hope springs eternal. For the latest info on free or reduced-price upgrades, drop by www.AskWoody.com.If you’re building a new PC, you have to buy Windows 10. And if you buy a new PC with Windows 10 preinstalled, the PC manufacturer (probably) paid for Windows 10.

       Microsoft may drop the numbering system, in which case Windows 10 would be simply Windows, but there will always be version numbers associated with each release. I tell you how to find yours in this chapter. The number 10 is, was, and always will be a marketing fantasy.

      THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN EDITIONS AND VERSIONS

      A bit of semantic squabbling. Microsoft makes a distinction between versions of Windows and editions of Windows. In fact, they’re two terms — generally interchangeable in the real world — for entirely different Windows animals.

      Windows versions started with the venerable Windows 1.0, continued through Windows XP and Windows 7, and reached their lofty heights with Windows 10. In the past, a version change was a big bump — from Windows Vista, for example, to Windows 7. With the advent of Windows 10 and Microsoft’s much-ballyhooed Windows as a Service, the version bumps are tiny. Almost imperceptible in some cases — but when you install them, you basically get a completely new copy of Windows.

      Versions in Windows 10 often come with nonsensical names such as the Fall Creators update version or Spring Forward Fall Back Stand Up Sit Down Fight Fight Fight version. Most people just give them numbers, which correspond roughly to when they were released — ergo, Win10 version 1607 and 1709 and 2004. I talk about the version numbers in Book 1, Chapter 2. Where version used to signify a major shift in WinStuff, now it's a tiny bump.

      Editions, on the other hand, refer to capabilities of an individual copy of Windows. You probably know about Windows Home and Windows Pro. Once upon a time, we had a Windows Ultimate, but it died with Windows 7, which was the last to have some meaningful stuff added to it.

      Windows 10 appears in six different major editions, uncounted numbers of minor editions, and three of the major editions are available in 32-bit and 64-bit incarnations. That makes nine different editions of Windows to choose from. Not counting the kinda-sorta Windows 10 editions for ARM chips (such as Qualcomm’s), phones (Mobile), Xbox, HoloLens, refrigerators, and bumper cars.

      In a nutshell, the four Windows 10 editions (and targeted customer bases) look like this:


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