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If you summarize Windows 10, I'm afraid it's not a "unified operating system" as described in the news, but rather an operating system that compromises significantly on traditional PCs while retaining as many of the innovations of Windows 8 as possible. Take a most intuitive example: in the Windows 10 system, APP was moved to the desktop, became a window APP, then if it is on the tablet device, the use of the experience may become far worse than Windows 8. The biggest problem with Windows is that it is aimed at both traditional PC users and mobile users, and has to tie them together. In Windows 10, this problem has not been changed at all, but just appeared in a different posture. If Windows 8 was a bad experience, where traditional PC users were often distracted by elements designed for tablets, Windows 10 is actually the opposite, where the experience on a tablet device is distracted by traditional PC elements. It's not hard to imagine that the same will piss off some users. In short, I'm afraid that Windows 10, if launched in this way, will be dear to some of the older users, but the system is far from mature. What Microsoft is really trying to do should be to split the tablet and PC in the right way on the basis of a set of Windows, not who compromises who.
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