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        Latest Windows 10 Build Adds New Features -- and Bugs
        Microsoft is also ramping up for big events, like Build and Ignite.
        
        
        
You can't say you weren't warned.
 If you download the latest version of still-under-development Windows 10 and something goes wrong, you can only point the finger at yourself.
Microsoft released its latest Windows 10 preview (build  10061) last week to its "fast-ring" testers, warts and all.
This build contains plenty of bugs, as described in Microsoft's  announcement. For those testers less tolerant of software flaws, Microsoft  also has a Windows 10 "slow-ring" group of testers. Previews of  Windows 10 can be obtained by signing up at Microsoft's Windows Insider Program. This latest build  is notable for arriving before Microsoft's big events for developers and IT  pros, which are coming as soon as next week and early May.
The most notable Windows 10 preview software flaw this time around seems to  be that Win32 desktop apps can't be launched from the Start Menu in this build.  Instead, users need to search for these apps and then pin them to the taskbar  to launch them.
New additions to this build are Microsoft's new Mail and  Calendar apps. These apps can use feeds from "Office 365, Exchange,  Outlook.com, IMAP, POP and other popular accounts," according to Microsoft's  announcement. However, the apps have "a known issue that causes every  typed letter to appear twice." To address this issue, testers can download  updated Mail and Calendar apps (builds 17.4016.42291.0) from the Window Store  beta version. However, the newly installed Mail and Calendar apps require 15  minutes to update for things to work normally.
Testers also might also see "a black screen with only  your mouse cursor during login/logout," Microsoft warned. A fix will be  coming through the Windows Update service.
Improvements
The good news is that Microsoft has addressed a problem from a  previous build where testers could not use Hyper-V. Also, Microsoft made a  number of improvements to the user interface with this build. 
For instance, Microsoft improved the user interface of the Windows  10 "continuum" feature, which optimizes the interface for so-called "two-in-one"  devices. A two-in-one device can switch from working like a tablet to being more  like a laptop by swapping in a keyboard, and Microsoft's continuum feature senses  when that happens. The continuum feature now better supports the tablet mode,  Microsoft claimed. Button access is spaced out now to make it easier for touch  interactions to happen.
As with all Windows 10 preview releases, Microsoft is now exercising  its faster software development cycles. It hasn't been holding back on builds because  of software flaws. If Microsoft's OEM partner AMD is to be believed, Windows 10  might start rolling out as  early as the end of July, but perhaps just for hardware imaging purposes.  If so, Microsoft seems to have lots of bugs to fix in just three months' time. 
Events and Windows 10
The company's Windows 10 messaging likely will ramp up next  week, beginning with its Build event for developers, where the company is expected  to talk more about its Windows 10 "universal apps" concept. That's  the idea where developers can write code once for the Windows 10 platform and have  it run across different form factors -- from big-screen devices such as Microsoft's  forthcoming Surface Hub device to smartphones and industrial devices -- with just  minor code tweaks, purportedly. 
Next up in early May will be Microsoft's Ignite conference for IT pros that promises to deliver more information on Microsoft's mobile  device management approach for Windows 10, and even for Android and iOS  devices. Ignite is Microsoft's new big tent event that combines previously  separate conferences that focused on Exchange, SharePoint and Lync (now called  "Skype for Business"), so we can expect more information about  Windows 10 and Microsoft's forthcoming server technologies, although many of  Microsoft's new servers to come are expected to arrive in 2016. Microsoft has  indicated, though, that its next System Center Configuration Manager product  will ship at the same time as Windows 10.
Microsoft's partners also have lots of Microsoft events  coming up shortly where Windows 10 will get discussed. For the details, check out this Redmond Channel Partner article.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.