Microsoft's Windows 10 event yesterday gave us a deeper look at the next generation of its operating system. At once panacea and prescience, it's a remedy for Windows 8's identity-crisis that also rethinks and reworks the Microsoft's bold vision of creating a single, universal experience for all of our devices.
We still don't have a release date for the Consumer Preview, but we'll have a new build of the Technical Preview sometime in the next few weeks, and a build for Windows Phones coming in February. There was also some pretty good news for folks who are currently running Windows 7, Windows 8.1, and Windows Phone 8 -- upgrades to Windows 10 will be free for a year. There's no word on pricing after that (or for folks still running Windows XP), but if Microsoft has its way, we will have all made the switch by then anyway.
Microsoft's Windows 10 event yesterday gave us a deeper look at the next generation of its operating system. At once panacea and prescience, it's a remedy for Windows 8's identity-crisis that also rethinks and reworks the Microsoft's bold vision of creating a single, universal experience for all of our devices.We still don't have a release date for the Consumer Preview, but we'll have a new build of the Technical Preview sometime in the next few weeks, and a build for Windows Phones coming in February. There was also some pretty good news for folks who are currently running Windows 7, Windows 8.1, and Windows Phone 8 -- upgrades to Windows 10 will be free for a year. There's no word on pricing after that (or for folks still running Windows XP), but if Microsoft has its way, we will have all made the switch by then anyway.
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