It’s been a long road, and the casualty of the march to where Microsoft made it is the loss of the mobile market. Updates to the UWP will fix issues on all three. The Movies and TV app on the Xbox is the exact same one as on the PC, which is the exact same one as on the phone. The latest Xbox update offers much of the same interfaces as Windows 10, including slide-out menus with a hamburger button, as well as the ability to (finally) run Universal Windows Apps. This work has also expanded to the Xbox One, and with the Summer Update for Xbox rolling out on July 29 th, the fruits of this labor has already been seen. What’s more, Windows has been expanded to work on devices as small as IoT, to Hololens, to the ultra-large screen of the Surface Hub. This is as simple as the new mail app, updated to support multiple sending accounts, instantly worked on the phone too since it’s a Universal Windows App. With Microsoft’s failure to establish a foothold in the mobile market, it’s almost too little, too late, but regardless, fixes and changes they make to Windows 10 also find their way to the phone. Windows 10 Mobile is not a different operating system, but the same Windows 10 base with a different UI to make it work better on the small touch screen. But, it has happened, and users of Windows can now experience the benefits of the work to get here. It’s been Microsoft’s goal for a long time to bring Windows 10 to all devices, and that was a tall hill to climb. It’s likely still not quite as good as Windows 8.1 was, but the net gain with the much better desktop is still a better overall solution. Tablet Mode has improved a lot since the initial release, and these changes, added to previous changes such as the ability to toggle on “more tiles” makes the latest update much better to use. The browser is a big part of tablets, and this has already been mentioned, but the addition of swipe navigation in Edge helps a lot as well. I personally really liked the taskbar, since it makes it much easier to switch apps, but it’s nice to have the option back for those that prefer it. There’s now an option to auto-hide the taskbar to make it a more immersive feel. When Windows 10 shipped, the taskbar would stay planted at the bottom. It’s a subtle change, but it really is a lot more usable now.Īnother thing that was missing was the full-screen tablet experience: in Windows 8.1, full-screen apps would lose the taskbar at the bottom. Also, the left side contains icons for File Explorer, Settings, Power, and logout. It makes it a lot easier to scroll more apps quicker, and see everything you have installed. Toggling this switches from the Start Screen to All Apps much more akin to how it was in Windows 8.1, with a full screen scrollable list, rather than just a list on the left side. The hamburger menu stays at the top, but directly under it is now the All Apps button. It’s still the same basic design, but the left hand side has been adjusted to make it more usable. The first change is the Start Screen layout. With the Anniversary Update, Microsoft is bringing some of the Windows 8.1 features back to improve Tablet Mode. Still, the balance of desktop versus tablet was improved greatly with Windows 10, so it was a net win. Overall, the interface worked well enough, but it was a step back from the usability of Windows 8.1 as a tablet interface. When Windows 10 launched, Tablet Mode, aka Continuum, was the new solution to offer Windows 10 across both traditional desktop computers, as well as touch first, or touch only devices like tablets. Tablet Mode changes, Windows Everywhere, and Skype Tablet Mode
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