If you want to summarize Windows 10, I am afraid that it is not a "unified operating system" as mentioned in the news, but an operating system that greatly compromises with traditional PCs on the premise of retaining Windows 8 innovation as much as possible. To give the most intuitive example: on Windows 10, the APP was moved to the desktop and became a windowed APP. If it is on a tablet device, the experience may become far inferior to Windows 8. At the same time, it is aimed at traditional PC users and mobile end users, and it has to tie the two together, which is the biggest problem of Windows at present. On Windows 10, this problem has not been changed at all, it just appears in a different way. If the experience of Windows 8 is not good, and traditional PC users are often disturbed by the elements designed for tablets, then Windows 10 is actually the opposite, and the experience of tablet devices will be disturbed by traditional PC elements. It is not difficult to imagine that it will also anger some users. In short, if Windows 10 is launched in this way, I am afraid that some old users will feel more friendly, but this system is far from mature. What Microsoft really wants to do should be to divide tablets and PCs in the right way based on a set of Windows, not who compromises whom.
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