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Windows 10 Anniversary Update: the Best New Features (theverge.com)

A year after the release of Windows 10, Microsoft is gearing up for Anniversary Update, the first major update to the company's desktop operating system. Ahead of the public release of Anniversary Update on August 2, Microsoft provided media outlets with the Anniversary Update, and their first impressions and reviews are out. The Verge has listed the big changes Windows 10 Anniversary ships with. From the article: Windows Ink: Windows Ink is without a doubt the best part of the Anniversary Update. It's essentially a central location to find built-in or third-party apps that work with your stylus. You can use the new sticky notes to note down reminders, and they'll even transform into true reminders as Cortana understands what you write.
Microsoft Edge extensions: If you're a fan of Chrome extensions, then you'll be glad to hear that they're heading to Microsoft's Edge browser. The Anniversary Update brings support for extensions, and it's now up to third-party developers to fill the Windows Store with their add-ons.
Cortana improvements: Microsoft's digital assistant, Cortana, debuted on Windows 10 last year, and the software maker is bringing it to the lock screen with the Anniversary Update. You'll be able to ask it to make a note, play music, set a reminder, and lots more without ever logging in. Cortana is also getting a little more intelligent, with the ability to schedule appointments in Outlook or options to send friends a document you were working on a week ago.
Dark theme and UI tweaks: You can switch on what I call even darker mode in settings, and it will switch built-in apps that typically use a white background over to black.
Other improvements include things like Windows 10's ability to set your time zone automatically, and opening up of Windows Hello, the biometric feature to apps and websites. Additionally, the Xbox One is getting Windows apps. The Verge adds, "It feels like a promise that was made years ago, but it's finally coming true with the Anniversary Update. As Windows 10 now powers the Xbox One, Microsoft will start rolling out an update to its console to provide support for Cortana on Xbox One and the new universal apps." Microsoft is also adding Bash, the Linux command line to Windows with the new update. It's an optional feature and users will need to enable it to use it. Users will also be able to "project to PC," a feature that will allow one to easily find a PC to project to from a phone or another PC. There's also a new Skype app, and syncing of notifications between PC and phone is getting better.
Going by the reviews, it appears Windows 10 Anniversary Update is substantially more stable, and has interesting new features. You can read the first impressions of it on ZDNet, and review on PCWorld.

9 of 375 comments (clear)

  1. Basically... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Basically, there's still nothing in it for us workstation/desktop users, it's all about mobile and apps. I'm definitely staying on Windows 7.

  2. Best new feature.... by thundercattt · · Score: 5, Funny

    It rolls back to Windows 7. The villagers rejoice

  3. Unusually +ve but what's in it for refusniks? by ICantFindADecentNick · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Automatic timezone, Dark theme. Whoopy do. Sounds like the bottom of the features barrel being scraped to make items for the story. I'm still sticking with Win7. My laptop doesn't need to be confused with a phone - and I don't want all of the telemetry/spyware.

  4. Slashdot Commenter by Merk42 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I didn't read the summary, but It's Microsoft, and therefore bad.
    Now everyone pat me on the pack because of my wit with +5 Insightful.

  5. BASH by Spock151 · · Score: 5, Funny

    This is Slashdot.. The best and "only" new feature is BASH.. Who cares about the rest...

    1. Re:BASH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The description is terrible. It's not bash; it's the ability to execute Linux binaries natively (one of which happens to be bash) as an NT subsystem. So you can run basically any Linux binary and it includes a complete Ubuntu (for whatever reason) userland.

    2. Re:BASH by thegarbz · · Score: 5, Informative

      Windows now runs Linux binaries. Just install the damn underpinnings if you want to. Nothing's stopping you. You can run an entire Linux DE now naively under Windows which is effectively the most complicated desktop application your computer's likely to execute.

      If you don't understand the significance of this then it's not Microsoft's problem.

  6. Re:Noooooooo by LichtSpektren · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is days before a huge LAN party I'm going to, I finally got everything set up the way I want it in Windows 10

    IT BURNS

    Isn't life grand, when you rent your computer from Microsoft rather than owning and controlling it?

  7. No, that's not insecure at all... by bobdehnhardt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "You'll be able to ask it to make a note, play music, set a reminder, and lots more without ever logging in. "

    All I can think when reading that is "attack vector." No matter how much they claim it's limited, sand-boxed, walled off and segregated from the rest of the system, someone will figure out a way to gain system access through it. Microsoft may as well advertise Windows 10, Now With Built In Password Bypass!