The hardware boost was confirmed in one of their many presentation videos with Win10's built in DirectX 12. Meaning: you can use old GPU's and still enjoy modern games.
Still, where to get the ISO's?
And I'd also love to know more about the "yearly subscription" thing.
Win 10 to be a free upgrade for Win 7/8 users
-
- KVRAF
- 14740 posts since 19 Oct, 2003 from Berlin, Germany
-
- KVRAF
- 6323 posts since 30 Dec, 2004 from London uk
The ISOs are here, bear in mind this is Beta (Final W10 not ready until summer) so not for use on production machines :Compyfox wrote:The hardware boost was confirmed in one of their many presentation videos with Win10's built in DirectX 12. Meaning: you can use old GPU's and still enjoy modern games.
Still, where to get the ISO's?
And I'd also love to know more about the "yearly subscription" thing.
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/preview-iso
-
- Pick Me Pick me!
- 10251 posts since 12 Mar, 2002 from a state of confusion
No yearly subscription.. it was a misunderstanding.Compyfox wrote:The hardware boost was confirmed in one of their many presentation videos with Win10's built in DirectX 12. Meaning: you can use old GPU's and still enjoy modern games.
Still, where to get the ISO's?
And I'd also love to know more about the "yearly subscription" thing.
http://lmgtfy.com/?q=windows+10+yearly+subscriptionhere was some confusion, however, when Microsoft's Terry Myerson started talking about Windows 10 "as a service." Did that mean that after that first year of free availability, Windows 10 would cost an annual fee? I asked Myerson for clarification after the presentation, and he confirmed that there will be no additional fees attached to Windows 10, whenever you buy it.