Ed Bott - Windows 10 Support Secrets
4 CHAPTER 1 | Getting started with Windows 10 Over time, you can expect to see the Start experience change slightly. Figure 1-3, for example, shows the Start experience as it appears in Windows 10, version 1511, which was released in November of 2015. Figure 1-3: This version of the Windows 10 Start experience blends some aspects of the Windows 7 Start menu with the live tiles of Windows 8. In that iteration of Start, you can click All Apps (just above the Start button and below Power) to display a scrolling, alphabetical list of every installed app, including Windows desktop programs. The Windows 10 Anniversary Update, which is scheduled for general release on August 2, 2016, brings some additional changes to the Start experience. That All Apps list, for example, becomes a permanent fixture on Start, and in Tablet Mode you can replace the pinned tiles with a scrolling full screen that shows all apps in alphabetical order. See Chapter 2 for a preview of those and other changes you can expect to see in the Anniversary Update.
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