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        Microsoft to Give Away Windows 10 to Current Users
        The offer applies to users all the way back to Windows 7, and includes Windows Phone.
        
        
        
Microsoft today unveiled Windows 10, and dropped a bombshell that could be a huge boon to its flagship operating system.
The company announced during an event in Redmond, Wash. that Windows 10  will be a free upgrade for  some current Windows and Windows Phone users.
Windows 10 will be a free upgrade for users of Windows 7,  Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8.1. The upgrade offer will be a limited one as  it will be available only during the first year after Windows 10's launch. Microsoft  did not say today when the Windows 10 product will hit the market but officials  have suggested it will appear in the latter part of this year. 
Update: Microsoft's free Windows 10 upgrade offer comes with fine print that's important. It's located at the bottom of this page and it indicates that the Enterprise editions of Windows 7 and Windows 8.1, as well as the Windows RT OS, are excluded from the offer. Possibly, the deal isn't extended to organizations. Here is that fine print, which is worth a read:
  It is our intent that most of these devices will qualify, but some hardware/software requirements apply and feature availability may vary by device. Devices must be connected to the internet and have Windows Update enabled. ISP fees may apply. Windows 7 SP1 and Windows 8.1 Update required. Some editions are excluded: Windows 7 Enterprise, Windows 8/8.1 Enterprise, and Windows RT/RT 8.1. Active Software Assurance customers in volume licensing have the benefit to upgrade to Windows 10 Enterprise outside of this offer. We will be sharing more information and additional offer terms in coming months.
The free upgrade news was announced by Terry Myerson,  Microsoft's executive vice president of Operating Systems, at the event, which  was billed as being about Windows 10 for consumers. The free upgrade news is also  described in Microsoft's  announcement today. 
Users who upgrade to Windows 10 will get future updates at  no additional charge throughout the lifetime of their devices. Microsoft plans  to release these updates "when they're ready," suggesting that is  moving away from its traditional Windows release cycle of once every three  years. Company officials are now describing Windows 10 as "a service"  and they are suggesting that Windows 10 will be "one of the largest Internet  services on the planet." As such, concerns with versions will become less  important for end users, and Microsoft is suggesting that a service-enabled  Windows 10 will ease matters for software developers. Developers of so-called  "universal apps," based on Windows 10, will be able to build a single  app that works across various Windows devices, such as PCs, tablets, smartphones  and Xbox game consoles. 
There are some unspecified hardware and software  requirements associated with the deal. Apparently, a device just has to have hardware that's  capable of running the Windows 10 preview. A Microsoft spokesperson described those specs as follows:
  - Processor: 1 gigahertz (GHz) or faster
 
  - RAM: 1 gigabyte (GB)
 
  - Free hard disk space: 16 GB 
 
  - Graphics card: Microsoft DirectX 9 graphics device with WDDM driver 
 
  - A Microsoft account and Internet access
 
There are some fine-print details associated with this free Windows  10 upgrade offer, including some as yet unspecified "hardware and software  requirements." Some Windows editions will be excluded from the offer. The  availability of some features will vary, depending on the device used. Microsoft's  announcement points to http://www.windows.com to get those details, but they weren't there at press time.
Windows 10 is currently available at the preview stage, but  Microsoft plans to issue another technical preview build next week, with plans  to make it available in 25 more languages.
Microsoft is also building Windows 10 for use on smartphone  devices. It is going to replace Microsoft's Windows Phone OS. While a public  preview of Windows 10 for smartphones hasn't been available to date, Microsoft  plans to release its first technical preview of the OS for those devices  sometime next month.
In addition to the free Windows 10 upgrade news, Microsoft announced  some new features of the OS to come during its Redmond, Wash. event. For  instance, Windows 10 PCs and tablets will get the Cortana personal assistant  app, which can respond to voice and typed commands (it previously was just an  app for smartphones). Windows 10 also will include a new "Project  Spartan" Web browser integrated with Cortana. This Spartan browser features  a reading view that makes Web page views more consistent and it also will allow  users to annotate those Web page reads with a pen tool. Microsoft showed off that  annotation capability during the event. 
Windows 10 will ship with several built-in apps, including a  new Xbox app to enable apps built for Xbox One gaming consoles to stream games to  a PC. Other apps to be included in Windows 10 include Mail and Calendar, Maps, Music,  People and Messaging, and Photos. Microsoft clarified during the talk that its  Outlook mail and calendar apps will be part of Windows 10, so that's apparently  what's meant by the Mail and Calendar app. All of the apps included with  Windows 10 can be synchronized through Microsoft's cloud-based OneDrive storage  service. 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.