Someone said :"It looks like Linux pretending to be Windows." One "new" thing it has OSX and Linux distros have had for years is virtual desktops (called spaces in OSX.). It's one of my favorite features in Linux distros.
Interesting I haven't looked into what Windows 10 is bringing to the table. I'm going to upgrade to Win10 as soon as I can (if it's still free), but only from a research perspective. I have bootcamp on my macbook so worst case scenario I can use it for gaming while I fix my windows machine.
NP, nice... good to see that they are not shooting themselves in the foot by turning an OS inter a subscription service. Server grade OS' are one thing, but subscription services on OS' for everyday people... easiest way to kill your company if your product isn't top notch.
As a active linux developer and packager i was really happy to see this in windows 10. And yes i do use windows on a few machines especially the one i just use for gaming. Microsoft has seemingly done a great job with windows 10 as far as i can tell from a few months of use and credit is due where credit is due.
Someone said :"It looks like Linux pretending to be Windows." One "new" thing it has OSX and Linux distros have had for years is virtual desktops (called spaces in OSX.). It's one of my favorite features in Linux distros.
Interesting I haven't looked into what Windows 10 is bringing to the table. I'm going to upgrade to Win10 as soon as I can (if it's still free), but only from a research perspective. I have bootcamp on my macbook so worst case scenario I can use it for gaming while I fix my windows machine.
Doing the same. It's nice that Win 10 is free (will be for a year).
For early adoption, or are they doing subscriptions after a year ?
Sorry my bad. It's free to redeem for 1 year of release date (if you have Win 7 or 8). If you redeem it in time, its free forever.
NP, nice... good to see that they are not shooting themselves in the foot by turning an OS inter a subscription service. Server grade OS' are one thing, but subscription services on OS' for everyday people... easiest way to kill your company if your product isn't top notch.
As a active linux developer and packager i was really happy to see this in windows 10. And yes i do use windows on a few machines especially the one i just use for gaming. Microsoft has seemingly done a great job with windows 10 as far as i can tell from a few months of use and credit is due where credit is due.