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Microsoft Windows 10 became available as a free upgrade (for devices running Windows 7 or 8.1) on July 29th and will remain free for one year. Any small business wishing to take advantage of the free upgrade should consider other costs beyond the upgrade license and decide whether to upgrade now or whether to upgrade. Sometime before the end of the free year or when it has to wait until the end of the free year and only need to process the upgrade when it is absolutely necessary, e.g. B. When the Windows version used has reached the end of its service life.

But how do you make this decision?

As a small business owner and technology service provider for small business, I pondered several relevant questions and then played on multiple devices to find the answers.

What is the difference between the user interface for general use ie. Find applications, start them, switch between them?

First, moving from Windows 7 to Windows 10 is less of a change than moving to Windows 8 and, to a lesser extent, Windows 8.1. The Start menu we've been used to for many years is still there, although it's a little different, and the taskbar is pretty familiar now, so finding and launching apps is pretty easy for anyone familiar with them . earlier versions of Windows. The switch between them hasn't changed either.

The painful switch between the standard desktop interface and the tablet-oriented “modern user interface” introduced in Windows 8 and partially corrected in Windows 8.1 is no longer noticeable as modern user interface applications can now run the desktop view in a resizable window, just like with familiar desktop apps. They look a little different, but they act the same, so your users probably won't even notice the difference. However, modern UI apps should be downloaded and installed from the Microsoft Store, while desktop apps should be installed in the usual way. Hence, your users need to know how to start and use the store very simply.

In short, ten minutes to show your employees the new user interface should be enough. Moving to Windows 8 / 8.1 would have been a lot more painful, which is probably why most businesses, whether small or not, have chosen not to budge.

What is the difference between the Administrator UI i.e. H. How easy can you make changes to settings, download and install updates, and troubleshoot?

It wouldn't be a Microsoft upgrade if all of the management buttons hadn't shifted a bit. It will therefore take your administrators a little more time to figure out where all of their important settings have moved, but they are probably used to it by now.

If you left-click the Start button and select Settings, you can make simple changes and run Windows Update. Right-clicking the start button will reveal pretty much everything an administrator needs to do.

What are the minimum and recommended specs for the device, and how well does Windows 10 work on an entry-level device?

The minimum requirements are: a processor with 1 GHz or faster, 1 GB RAM for 32 bit or 2 GB for 64 bit, 16 GB hard disk space for 32 bit and 20 GB for 64 bit, a DirectX 9 graphics card or later with a WDDM 1.0 Drivers and a minimum resolution of 800 x 600. Remember that these are minimum requirements and I would recommend more.

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