The iPhone Changed Everything
The launch of the Apple
iPhone on June 29, 2007, changed everything. Up to that time the Windows
operating system (OS) was on 90 percent of computers worldwide. The iPhone was
soon followed by the iPad, also by Apple. People could get mobile computers,
computers that they could carry with them and get on the internet. In October
2008, the first android phone was released. Android phones and tablets used
open-source software, and any manufacturer could make them. Soon there were a
lot more Apple and android devices than Windows machines connecting to the
internet.
Microsoft Losing Ground
Microsoft realized it was
losing ground. They decided to emulate Apple. Like Apple, Microsoft was going
to manufacture its own devices (Surface) and phones (Windows phone) and a
brand-spanking new OS (Windows 8). Furthermore, since so many people were
getting on the internet with mobile devices, Microsoft would make the interface
of the new OS like the interface of Apple and android devices. They would
create tiles that users could move around on a touch screen, just the iPhone.
Except, it wasn’t like the
iPhone or the android phone. It was brand new. It wasn’t like previous editions
of Windows either, so users had to research how to do simple, everyday things
like find the control panel or even shut the damned thing off. The launch of
Windows 8 was greeted with a huge Boo! For the next year, most people who
bought new computers wanted them to run on Windows 7, rather than 8.
Windows 8 was thrust onto the
public on October 26, 2012. A month later Steve Sinofsky, head of the Windows
Division of Microsoft, was gone. A little over a month after that, Steve
Ballmer, Microsoft’s CEO, announced that he would be leaving as soon as the
company could find a new CEO.
A year later Satya Nadella
was appointed CEO of the giant software company. He was faced with the huge job
of cleaning up the mess that Sinofsky and Ballmer had left. By that time
Windows 8.1 had been launched. 8.1 nudged the system back toward the Windows 7
interface. For example, the start button was restored. It was a free upgrade
for anyone who had Windows 8.
Windows 10
In October 2014, Microsoft
began releasing beta (trial) versions of the new OS, Windows 10. Anyone who wanted
could download it and try it out. By July it was released to the public at
large. Best of all, it was free. Microsoft was giving something away for free?
Yes, they wanted people to get away from the disaster that was Windows 8. The
new system was not free to everyone, but if you had Windows 8 or 8.1, you could
download 10 free. Not only that, but if you had Windows 7 in your computer, you
could also download 10 for free. Not only could you get Windows 10 free, but
Microsoft kept sending messages to Windows 7 users, urging them to download 10
before it was too late. Actually users had a year to make up their mind. If you
download Windows 10 on your 7, 8, or 8.1 machine before July 29, 2016, it will
be free. If you download it after that, you will have to pay for it.
What is it like?
Windows 10 has some of the
same problems that are found in Windows 8. The start button is back, and the
irritating charms menu is gone. I still had to search around to find the
control panel. The desktop is full of tiles, which seem useless to me if you
don’t have a touch screen. You can get rid of them if you want, though. The new
browser, Edge, is supposed to be pretty good, but I had a lot of trouble
finding my favorites. Other people have told me the same thing. Instead of using
Edge, I still use the chrome browser. There is a digital assistant, Cortana.
You can speak to her when you want to find information rather than typing it.
However, you can do the same with Chrome. Cortana will coordinate your schedule
and stuff like that, but you would have to use Outlook for your calendar. I use
Google calendar and don’t want to change that.
What to do?
I have a desktop with Windows
7 and a laptop with Windows 10. I really disliked Windows 8, so as soon as I
could, I downloaded 10 onto my laptop. It’s okay, but I prefer Windows 7. I
keep fighting off Microsoft’s efforts to download Windows 10 on my desktop. For
me the only drawback to Windows 7 is that a certain point (January 2020)
Microsoft will stop supporting Windows 7 with security updates. That computer
will be seven or eight years old by then. I don’t know whether it will still be
alive, but if I am still using it, it will not be safe to use it to go on the
internet.
But I found something new
recently. It’s product called Start 10, from Stardock. It changes the interface
of a Windows 10 computer to something very much like Windows 7. It costs $5. I
loaded it only my laptop a couple of days ago. I’m going to try it for a few
weeks. If I continue to like it, I will download Windows 7 onto my desktop and
then put Start 10 on it, so that if I have the computer in 2020, Microsoft will
continue to provide security updates.
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