Windows 10 includes many improvements for desktop and users on the go: the return of the Start Menu, Cortana, Task View and much more. The Windows 10 Technical Preview is designed for enthusiasts, developers, and enterprise customers to evaluate the latest changes to Windows. Windows 10 Technical Preview Build 10041 Activator with Product Key. Microsoft has created a special insiders program to deliver regular updates throughout the Windows 10 development cycle, and those who sign up will get the very latest software to test.

The latest build of Windows 10 (Build 10049) gives us a taste of Project Spartan, the browser that will put the nail in Internet Explorer's coffin. Microsoft's virtual assistant Cortana has made her way to the desktop in a slew of countries around the world. And there's still more to come. Windows Hello, for example, will bring biometric authentication to the operating system, letting you scan your face, finger or iris in lieu of typing a password.

Windows 10 is shaping up to be the best version of Windows yet -- a huge leap over Windows 8, which had a troubled reception. And upgrades to Windows 10 will be free for a year, for folks who are currently running Windows 7, Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8. 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.

What's New:
  • The Start menu is back—and it’s more personal, more organized, and more fun than before.
  • An improved universal search that lives within the Start menu. Search your PC and the web from the taskbar to find help, apps, files, settings—you name it. Your personal assistant Cortana will be your guide.
  • Modern UI apps designed for touch now work windowed in the desktop, and will be compatible with a mouse and keyboard.
  • What is Cortana? Not what—who. Cortana is your clever new personal assistant, and she can search the web, find things on your PC, keep track of your calendar—even tell you jokes.
  • There's a new multi-tasking button in the taskbar called "Task view" that gives an overall view of all running applications and virtual desktops, similar to Expose in OS X.
  • "Continuum" which refers to Windows' ability to adapt, showing or hiding features depending if you are on a touch device or using the mouse.
  • Windows' snap capabilities have been improved, and now you select up to four applications and arrange them in a 2x2 grid.

Product key: NKJFK-GPHP7-G8C3J-P6JXR-HQRJR


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