Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Microsoft Windows Operating Systems Upgrades

New Leaked Build Is Evidence That Windows 10 Will Be Ready By July 29 302

Ammalgam writes: A new pre-released build of Microsoft's latest Operating System Windows 10 leaked to the internet today. The build (10151) shows a more refined and significantly faster user interface than previous versions of the product. Microsoft seem to be focused on last minute refinements of the UI at this point and the product looks almost ready for prime time. A picture gallery of Windows 10 build 10151 can be found here.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

New Leaked Build Is Evidence That Windows 10 Will Be Ready By July 29

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 29, 2015 @04:15AM (#50009985)

    Literally. So I will run Linux instead. No GNUs is not good GNUs.

  • Evidence? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 29, 2015 @04:19AM (#50009989)

    The fact that you can reserve a download of Windows 10 with a release date of July 29 isn't evidence of this already?

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      To be pedantic there is no guarantee that a product is "ready" when it's released.

      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
        I came here to post the exact thing as the GP. I just signed up for the update and it said it would download when it was available on the 29th...

        I don't think there is anything pedantic about your comment at all, it is a very valid point. Not like a software company has ever pushed something out before it was ready. released != ready

    • How the hell do you "reserve a download"?

      • by narcc ( 412956 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @11:00AM (#50012089) Journal

        By following the simple process outlined in the "Get Windows 10" notification that magically appeared on millions of computers last month. If you run windows, you'll find it in your system tray. It's the white windows logo.

        Be warned: It's a highly technical process that involves "clicking".

        • Be warned: It's a highly technical process that involves "clicking".

          I once knew a guy who mastered perfectly the process of clicking, but then I saw him doing a doubleclick. Yep, you heard it right: two consecutive clicks performed quickly one after the other. Before that I didn't know that there are people that can actually do it. Simply put, my mind was blown. It's a very cool trick, you have to see it in real life to fully appreciate it.

          • by KGIII ( 973947 )

            I simply do not believe you. There is no way a human could do such a thing. Not now, not ever. Pics or it did not happen.

      • Granted they've got a weird way of wording it, but essentially it means your workstation will begin downloading it early, or at least a portion of it, so that their servers don't get quite so hammered on the official release date, and you don't have to wait with disconnects or incredibly slow download speeds on July 29 and the days immediately following it. The earlier you reserve, ostensibly, the sooner you get the last bit downloaded so that come July 29, you can just run the install and be off and runnin
    • Evidence? The linked article (picture gallery) has 6 paragraphs and 5 exclamation points. The photos show, basically, nothing that couldn't be shopped up off-line. The author, Onuora Amobi, needs to cut back on the exclamation points and drink way less M$ Kool-aid.
  • by Mashiki ( 184564 ) <mashiki@gmail.cBALDWINom minus author> on Monday June 29, 2015 @04:27AM (#50009997) Homepage

    How the hell it became news, I don't have a clue either. Microsoft said it was going to be released on July 29th, almost 28 days ago. [windows.com]

    • by heyguy ( 981995 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @04:59AM (#50010051)
      I'm running Build 10130 right now and have run into enough issues that have made me wonder whether Microsoft would be able to make their July 29th ship date with a complete product, so I found the article to be interesting. That said, I do agree that this hardly qualifies as a news story that should be posted on slashdot.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I'm really struggling to see any differences between this and the insider preview version I've been running for a while. TFA says it is faster, but doesn't give any specifics. This is a pretty piss-poor article/submission.

    • It is "news" because /. now trumpets its headlines to twitter and facebook. The provocative headlines may be purchased by, say, Microsoft to start up the buzz for the upcoming release of Windows 10.

      .
      Now, when you read a headline here that is more provocation than fact, you will know the reason may be to stir things up on twitter and facebook. It's part of /.'s continuing decline into pop culture viral page hits and away from technical discussion.

    • A lot of it is just the run of the mill stupid site trying to drive up traffic with controversial headlines. Worked too, Slashdot linked to them. However part of it is just the guy being a derp and thinking that because the UI wasn't completely polished off it wasn't ready to go. Had he looked in to it, he'd realize that kind of polish is nearly always the things that comes last, right before release, for a variety of reasons.

    • It's not news that MS would release Win10 on July 29. It's news that Win10 would be usable by July 29. From what I've read, there was considerable doubt on that.

  • by ThePhilips ( 752041 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @04:29AM (#50010001) Homepage Journal

    The modern OSes, including Win10, as if competing who can make a bigger clusterfuck out of the UI.

    Some say it is because of the touchscreen support. But in my experience it sucks even more with the touchscreen. Unless you play movies or listen to music. Because even moderately involved browsing (say going through the bug tracking) is already rather tedious.

    At least under Linux, I can replace the UI with something user-friendly like Xfce or LXDE. Useless with touchscreen - but fully usable with the mouse and not fucked up.

    • Yeah, Windows 10 looks like shit. /Oblg. Windows 1 vs Windows 8

      * http://gaspull.geeksaresexytec... [netdna-cdn.com]

      • Nah. Win10 looks like the modern GNOME3 desktop: beatiful as a hand-drawn picture, but just as useful.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @06:52AM (#50010353)

      But in my experience it sucks even more with the touchscreen.

      That's nice. I'll voice the opposite opinion. Windows 8 tries to greatly improve the completely non-existent touch screen interface that exists in Windows 7. Windows 8 is borderline navigatable on touchscreen and I'm not talking about the metro UI (which is an abortion).

    • You're up to +5 already but I'll just say that I totally agree. I wouldn't mind the ugly touch UI and "apps" if there was a switch to change it all to "classic" desktop mode (i.e. Win 95 to 7).
      What's wrong?
      • Horrid usability for desktop use (everything flat with no hints as to what's clickable, tons of waste of screen real estate because there's so much whitespace in apps)
      • Most programs have been rewritten for touch and that means : Tons of whitespace leading to waste of screen real estate, low information
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @05:15AM (#50010071)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Attila Dimedici ( 1036002 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @05:23AM (#50010083)
      I don't like Windows 8.1, but I have yet to hear anyone say that Windows 10 actually fixes any of the things I don't like about it.
      • by MacTO ( 1161105 )

        Unless you are one of those people who passionately hated the Start Screen, it probably doesn't fix many of the things you don't like about it. Judging from the discussions about it, Microsoft has done very little outside of improving the integration between the Modern UI and the traditional desktop. Yet it is still a schisophrenic UI (which is easily bumped into when you try configuring yours system, as one example) and Microsoft is still pushing their online services.

        • One thing I discovered when I moved to 8.1 was that Microsoft has eliminated the "Easy Transfer" option (You can "Easy Transfer" to 8.1, but you cannot "Easy Transfer" FROM 8.1). As a result, when I get my next computer I am going to have to configure all of my settings all over again. The only other choice is to give Microsoft ALL of my personal information.
        • Their start screen which uses the whole display is bullshit. I literally had no idea you could swipe and see more icons. Nothing indicates that is even possible. No scroll bars or even arrows to show there might be more in another direction. To access the options for the Metro apps you have to swipe the right side of the screen ONLY WHEN ITS LOADING. Seriously, what the fuck?

      • by Walter White ( 1573805 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @07:21AM (#50010463)

        IANAWE. I had a need to run Windows on something to develop a test TCP/IP server using VS/C#. It wasn't exactly a production system and I had SWMBO's Win7 PC to fall back on so I put Win10 preview on a new laptop and used it. VS 2013 works fine and I would expect that to be among the first programs they tested. I've also used a couple IDEs for embedded targets (Keil, PSoC creator) and they work fine on Win10 even when Win10 is running in a VMWare VM. The only thing I have seen not work is mounting host drives from the VM. I also see a null pointer exception for explorer.exe on shutdown for the most recent release.

        The charms bar that pops up on the left if I ever get the pointer close to that edge is gone - Yay!
        I can search the task menu with one click - Yay!
        The propensity for built in apps to take over the whole screen and with NO option to minimize seems to be gone - double Yay!

        And decades after other OSs have figured out how to manage multiple desktops, Win10 manages multiple desktops.

        OTOH, Win10 still figures out ways to reboot w/out explicit permission from me. That has not been fixed. Would it be so hard to pop up a dialog box following an update that asks permission? There are times I've been in the middle of something but away from the PC and it restarts because I'm not there to stop it. That is incredibly rude and stupid beyond belief and yet Microsoft deems us not worthy to make that decision.

        For my purposes Win10 is an improvement over 8.1 but not enough so to draw me away from Linux.

        • There is a setting in the Windows Update action center that allows you to stop updates from automatically installing without your explicit permission. It pops up the nice little dialog you are requesting. So I would be careful about who you are calling stupid or rude.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by PRMan ( 959735 )
      Me too. I hated 8.x and refused to use it. I'm happy with Windows 10 as the successor to Windows 7.
    • Win 8.1 isn't too terrible, as long as I can avoid Metro. But I'm still going to upgrade. Not sure if I'd upgrade from 7 though.

  • 'Leak' ? (Score:5, Informative)

    by ChunderDownunder ( 709234 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @05:34AM (#50010099)

    The Windows Insider builds are available to anyone who can be bothered signing up to the program. The only 'leak' here is if publishing screenshots constitutes a breach of the EULA.

    MS releases an updated beta. *yawn*

    • The Windows Insider builds are available to anyone who can be bothered signing up to the program. The only 'leak' here is if publishing screenshots constitutes a breach of the EULA.

      Microsoft only releases some builds to the insider program. More to the fast ring than the slow, but they certainly do not release every internal build to the insider program. For example, the currently available build for PC is Build 10130. For me, it's always interesting to see what's in the latest internal builds even if they aren't released to the public - just to know what to expect when a build is released.

      Also, this is not just a screenshot release. The entire build was leaked, and this is the

  • by hyades1 ( 1149581 ) <hyades1@hotmail.com> on Monday June 29, 2015 @06:35AM (#50010283)

    Having taken a look at the screenshots, I can't help but think of words like "garish", "cartoonish" and "Oh, dear, it looks like Rainbow Brite puked all over the screen".

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I don't know, but they'd be well-advised to be about it. Phones and tablets, and even laptops, are limited in so many ways. I want an interface that can take advantage of what a full-scale PC with multiple monitors offers.

        My cell phone is for checking up on stuff when I'm not at my desk. I don't want or need an OS that caters to a device that's my second or third priority.

        • +1 They're hell bent on making a single (or as similar as possible) for phones and PCs and it obviously has to cater to the lowest denominator. Result: The desktop loses the highly polished interface that has evolved over decades. I hate it. The funny thing is, I thought that if anybody, it'd be Apple who would do this (because they're so oriented to simplicity) but they have enough sense to keep the UI for PCs separate from that of tables and phones.
    • I'm not a fan of the new `flat' look they're going for... but "designed by fisher price" was used to describe WindowsXP... so... this is something else. Perhaps designed by Seth Macfarlane?

    • by nmb3000 ( 741169 )

      Having taken a look at the screenshots, I can't help but think of words like "garish", "cartoonish" and "Oh, dear, it looks like Rainbow Brite puked all over the screen".

      I like to call it the "Fisher Price: My First Computer" syndrome. It's a pandemic on mobile devices, and has recently jumped the species barrier to desktops. Symptoms include:

      - Completely flat and simple user-interface made from a small color palette
      - Simple shapes comprised of 90-degree angles
      - Uninspired colors and themes made up of primary colors so as not to distract from learning exercises
      - Huge buttons and other user-interface targets, designed to make it easy to use by those with undeveloped eye-ha

  • by gabrieltss ( 64078 ) on Monday June 29, 2015 @06:53AM (#50010359)

    YAWWWWWN! Still looks like Windows 8 to me. Windows 8's UI and "look and feel" sucks big green donkey dicks! I'll be sticking with Windows 7.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's funny how people said the same thing about the Vista/7 look when it was new. And about the XP look when it first appeared in screenshots. Probably the Windows 95 look too, but I wasn't into PCs back then.

      Having used 8 for a few years it's fine. They made the shadows a bit deeper in 10, which was my only real complaint. I've been replacing the start menu since I moved up to 7 anyway so the start screen never bothered me.

  • I was hoping they continue releasing an English language version ;)

  • I think the real question is, for those of us debating the free upgrade, most of us with Windows 7, how long do you wait?

    I guess it must depend on how much of a disaster the initial launch is...

    From my own perspective it will be: How many drivers will be broken? What software will not be supported?

    All I know for sure is that WMC will be gone, and I will have to find a replacement for it. Though it has been kinda half broken for awhile now (unsupported codecs etc...).

  • " Microsoft seem to be focused on last minute refinements of the UI ..."

    The words "Microsoft" and "last minute" in the same sentence are....concerning. Hell, they have enough issues when they're not trying to reach self-imposed deadlines.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

Working...