The latest preview of Windows 10 delivers a bunch of new features and improvements. Here's a list of them all, even the tiny bits Microsoft didn't mention.
After weeks of waiting and one accidental release, Microsoft is now rolling out Windows 10 build 16215 for PCs in the Windows Insider Fast ring. This new preview brings a lot of features and changes that will be available later this year as part of the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update rollout.
Windows 10 build 16215 is perhaps the biggest update Insiders have received, and it packs many exciting improvements, such as an updated version of the Start menu and Action Center, featuring Fluent Design System elements. Cortana gets reminder improvements, there is a new handwriting experience, a new emoji panel for hardware keyboards, and Microsoft is bringing the phone touch-keyboard experience to the desktop.
Additionally, there are a number of changes to the shell experience. The Settings app gets a lot of enhancements, Microsoft Edge finally adds the ability to pin sites to the taskbar, you can now annotate ebooks, and a lot more.
Full story from the WindowsCentral blog...

After weeks of waiting and one accidental release, Microsoft is now rolling out Windows 10 build 16215 for PCs in the Windows Insider Fast ring. This new preview brings a lot of features and changes that will be available later this year as part of the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update rollout.
Windows 10 build 16215 is perhaps the biggest update Insiders have received, and it packs many exciting improvements, such as an updated version of the Start menu and Action Center, featuring Fluent Design System elements. Cortana gets reminder improvements, there is a new handwriting experience, a new emoji panel for hardware keyboards, and Microsoft is bringing the phone touch-keyboard experience to the desktop.
Additionally, there are a number of changes to the shell experience. The Settings app gets a lot of enhancements, Microsoft Edge finally adds the ability to pin sites to the taskbar, you can now annotate ebooks, and a lot more.
Full story from the WindowsCentral blog...