There are quite a few theories floating around out there as to why
Microsoft decided to name the latest version of its flagship operating
system Windows 10, skipping over Windows 9. On Tuesday, the company unveiled the name and showed off a brief demo of the OS at a press event in San Francisco. The leap from Windows 8 to Windows 10 easily stole the spotlight from any visual design and developmental changes Microsoft has baked into the product.
So what’s the deal? On the surface, it appears to be smart marketing.
The Windows 8 brand has been mired in controversy for the last two
years, stemming from Microsoft’s bold yet unfamiliar design language and
functionality decisions. So why not scrap any association with an
entire numeric leap?
Other theories are that there are 10 major consumer releases of Windows,
making this a celebration of that progress, while some feel it should
have been called Windows 11 in that case. Some think Microsoft may make
future Windows releases incremental, and thus free, after Windows 10 —
the same strategy Apple employed when it switched from numerals to feral
cats after the release of Mac OS
X. That theory has been bolstered by reports earlier this week stating
that Andreas Diantoro, the president of Microsoft Indonesia, reportedly
said the company was planning on making its next version of Windows free to current Windows 8 users. (The company declined to talk Windows 10 business models yesterday.)
View Source: Yahoo
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