Microsoft has added a setting to Windows 10 that will let users restrict new software installation to only those apps hosted in the Windows Store. The option debuted in the latest version of Windows 10 Insider, the preview program which gives participants an early peek at the next feature upgrade as Microsoft builds it. That version, labeled 15042, was released Friday.
With the setting at its most stringent, Windows 10 will block the installation of Win32 software -- the traditional legacy applications that continue to make up the vast bulk of the Windows ecosystem -- and allow users to install only apps from the Windows Store, Microsoft's marketplace. Other settings allow software installation from any source, or, while allowing that, put a preference on those from the Windows Store.
Unless Microsoft removes them, the options will appear in the next Windows 10 feature upgrade, dubbed "Creators Update," which is to launch in March or April.
-- submitted from IRC
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 02 2017, @12:57PM
From your sig:
Maybe never seen by you. But that's no reason not to help others recognize your faults. If you don't notice that, well … your problem, not mine.
What if they post as AC? Either you don't see them, then you are not ready to show them for anything, and thus this claim is wrong. Or you are ready to show them for the racists they are, then you obviously have to see them, and therefore your previous claim is not true.