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posted by cmn32480 on Wednesday July 27 2016, @06:06AM   Printer-friendly
from the over-my-dead-body dept.

To the shock of no one, Windows 10 users who upgrade to the Anniversary Update (scheduled for release next week), will not be able to disable Cortana using the settings.

If you compare the start menu settings of Cortana of the current version of Windows (version 1511) with those of the Anniversary Update (version 1607) you will notice that Cortana's off switch is no longer available (thanks Ian Paul @PC World for spotting that)

Cortana, the digital assistant that Microsoft touts as one of the major features of Windows 10 supports interaction via touch, typing, ink and voice.

Microsoft integrated Cortana deeply with the native search functionality of Windows 10. While linked to search, Windows 10 users may turn off Cortana currently to use search without it. While you might have to turn off web searches on Windows 10 as well, doing so ensured that you got search functionality that matched those of previous versions of Windows.

Windows users who turned off Cortana had two main reasons for it: either they did not need Cortana functionality, or they did not want it because of privacy implications.

[...] It is still possible to turn off Cortana, but not by using the preferences. The policy to disable Cortana is still available and you may use it to turn off Cortana on the device.

Please note that the Group Policy Editor is only available in professional versions of Windows 10. Most notably, it is not available in Windows 10 Home.

The linked article goes into detail on how to disable Cortana using the Registry in Windows 10 Home, and Group Policy Editor in Windows 10 Pro. However, Microsoft no longer makes disabling Cortana anywhere near as easy as it was.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Grishnakh on Wednesday July 27 2016, @03:19PM

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Wednesday July 27 2016, @03:19PM (#380771)

    Oh please. MS's market share hasn't changed much at all. Android/iOS do not have any effect on PC marketshare.

    MS is just mad that they never hit it big in the smartphone market.

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  • (Score: 2) by Capt. Obvious on Wednesday July 27 2016, @04:25PM

    by Capt. Obvious (6089) on Wednesday July 27 2016, @04:25PM (#380790)

    Their marketshare of all computing devices is shrinking. Their marketshare of developers is shrinking (it's indirect, but super-important). Their marketshare of appstores is shrinking.

    I honestly never understood why MS didn't hit it big in the smartphone market. You would think they would have been able to. If anyone could extend, embrace, extinguish Android, I would imagine it would be MS. And I imagine most Android developers would use an MS written tool to cross publish their apps onto the MS store.

    But then again, even Amazon is struggling against the Google store, and they've thrown some money at it as well. They seem to have a better plan though.

    • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Wednesday July 27 2016, @09:10PM

      by Grishnakh (2831) on Wednesday July 27 2016, @09:10PM (#380891)

      Their marketshare of all computing devices is shrinking. Their marketshare of developers is shrinking (it's indirect, but super-important). Their marketshare of appstores is shrinking.

      Those are all completely irrelevant. The total number of computing devices is growing many-fold, and the number of developers is growing too as a result of that. The number of appstores has increased because mobile devices all use appstores. None of this affects the PC market in a significant way. No one is using a smartphone to do serious office work, engineering CAD work, graphic design, etc.

      The only thing that's relevant is MS's revenues and profits. It doesn't matter if a market is expanding, or new similar markets are growing, as long as your company's revenues and profits stay the same or grow. Marketshare is irrelevant to profit.

      I honestly never understood why MS didn't hit it big in the smartphone market.

      Then you haven't been paying attention. MS didn't hit it big in the smartphone market because they're incompetent. Their mobile products have always been ugly, hard to use, and not very exciting. The only thing they're good at is maintaining and milking their near-monopoly on desktop PCs and also all their enterprise software that largely goes along with that. If Apple suddenly decided to build reusable rocket engines or nuclear-powered submarines, do you think they'd be successful there too? Probably not. But MS is a special case because they're especially bad at understanding customers and making them happy, they're only good when they're controlling the market, as they largely do with PCs, thanks to their historical advantage. As soon as something really changes in the PC market (especially for business computing, much more so than home computing), they're toast. Who knows when that'll be though.

      • (Score: 2) by Capt. Obvious on Thursday July 28 2016, @06:08AM

        by Capt. Obvious (6089) on Thursday July 28 2016, @06:08AM (#381068)

        I've used Android, iOS and several Windows phones (feel the need to specify that, as, unlike iOS/Android, they're OS's feel very different between major versions.) I understand how they didn't win over iOS users. But the only issue I ever thought Android beat Windows on was the size of the appstore. (The last point was as a consumer. I leave aside any questions of F/OSS, Java v. .NET, or other developer-focused issues.) And they seemed to have a few ideas for jump starting their appstore that make sense.