- Jan 3, 2013
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Basically, yes. It feels like all the mistakes they neatly side-stepped with Windows 8 brought back to make those who refused to adapt to W8 pay for their intransigence (and those idiots seem to be lapping it up).
it seems to be gone, or moved somewhere I can't find. One of the few good things about OS X is that if your Mac goes to sleep, you get a small window of time to wake it up without a password but if you leave it for more than a minute or so, you have to put it in again.There used to be a policy for password required after waking, hopefully it wasn't removed.
But it' snot consistent because you have to learn a different way in each mode. Imagine someone who uses W10 on their desktop/laptop for a year or two and then buys a tablet. His tablet will feel like a completely different OS because all the things he is used to doing won't work in tablet mode. OTOH, in Windows 8 there is 100% consistency, no matter what kind of device you use it on.Like I said before, the new universal approach is more consistent but will be less intuitive xD
How? They look exactly the same to me.Microsoft has distinguished the different interfaces
Yes, very much so. Luddites accused Windows 8 of being "two-faced" with the desktop and metro sides of the OS. I can understand that criticism being levelled, although I always thought it was massively over-emphasised. But now, if you are using something like a Surface Pro 3, what you'll experience with Windows 10 is more akin to multiple personality disorder, in that the same application or app will behave differently in different circumstances and you can't always tell which one you have to deal with. "Am I speaking to Metro or Desktop?" It is an order of magnitude more frustrating for users.You think the UI is too segregated for someone who is considering a SP3?