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        Latest Windows 10 Preview Release Features UI Improvements
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - April 30, 2015
 
		
        Microsoft on Wednesday issued the latest build of the Windows 10 technical preview, delivering  user interface improvements and several bug fixes.
Build 10074 is now available to Windows Insider participants -- both "fast-ring" and "slow-ring" testers -- via the Windows Update automatic download process.  Microsoft also is issuing ISOs of this build for testers who want clean  installs of the OS, according to its announcement.
Microsoft is now referring to its Windows 10 Technical  Previews as "Insider Previews." That change was made to honor Windows  Insider participants.
While Joe Belfiore, Microsoft corporate vice president for  PC, tablet and phone, showed off a lot of Windows 10 features at Microsoft's  Build event in San Francisco Wednesday, those features aren't all available in this  release. Microsoft conceives of Windows 10 as being a service. It rolls out new  features when they are ready, so that's the new distinction. 
However, the capability to discover apps through an  interface in the Start Menu, something that was demonstrated by Belfiore,  apparently made it to this release. The Start Menu has a section that  suggests  apps based on what people use. It uses Bing/Cortana in the background to come up with the recommendations.
This latest Windows 10 preview release brings back the Aero Glass  transparent look. However, some testers will see a new "blur" effect  that looks like frosted glass. Microsoft is sending out both interfaces to  testers to see which one gets favored more.
Some things got fixed in this release. This build  now  lets testers launch their Win32 desktop apps from the Start Menu. Apps bought  through the Windows Store for Windows 8.1 will now show up as purchased apps in  the Windows Store beta version on Windows 10. An app playing audio now will  continue to play when minimized. It's also now possible to download music using  the Xbox Music and Music preview apps. 
This build comes with problems, too. The People app  "continues to crash." Developer Mode can't be used to test apps. Some  games won't play in the full-screen mode.
Microsoft indicated Wednesday that its Project Spartan browser for Windows 10 will be called "Edge." The new browser, which jettisons a lot of legacy code, has been available for testing since late March.
Some things mentioned by Belfiore at Build apparently aren't  in this preview. Belfiore had mentioned these coming improvements:
  - The return of "jump lists" with File  Explorer and other apps
 
  - A lock-screen personalization feature called  "Windows Spotlight" that learns what the user likes in terms of  displayed images
 
Belfiore had also talked about an improved  "Continuum" feature for Windows Phones running Windows 10. This feature  lets users connect their smartphones to a PC screen. Windows 10 then displays the  phone apps like desktop apps. The app needs to be a so-called  Windows  Universal app for this scheme to work, apparently. Also, there are some unspecified  hardware requirements to get this feature to work.
For those interested in Windows 10 for Windows Phone devices,  Microsoft posted a detailed description  of its design principles in this  blog post.
Microsoft didn't update the public about its release plans  on Wednesday, although it has indicated that Windows 10 will get released sometime  this summer. Microsoft is ambitiously claiming that Windows 10, when released, will land on 1 billion devices in a couple of years. For some Windows users, that number will be helped along because Windows 10 will be a free upgrade for them, but enterprise users are excepted.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.