Tech Advisor

Windows 10 S

Free until March 2018

- Mark Hachman

Microsoft’s Windows 10 S is what happens when a once-easygoing operating system has children and turns into a helicopter parent. Windows 10 S, a locked-down version of Windows 10 found on the Surface Laptop and a small group of lowcost, third-party notebooks, keeps students safe and secure by restrictin­g them to the Windows Store. But as our review shows, the lack of freedom chafes.

Locking your PC away from the big, bad, outside world makes sense when your children are going off

to school or university, at least according to Microsoft. But even the most dutiful parent will wonder why their child can’t use Chrome to beam YouTube videos to a Chromecast, print on some local printers, or protect their PC with anything other than Windows Defender. There’s always an escape hatch: a simple upgrade to Windows 10 Pro. But otherwise, Windows 10 S can be an exercise in frustratio­n.

Who’s it for?

Microsoft provides Windows 10 S free of charge to academic institutio­ns, and it’s not hard to see why: it wants a school’s IT department (not you) to buy its associated Intune for Education management support software, as well as an Office 365 for Education subscripti­on for the Office apps students will use.

Windows 10 S and its hardware are also chasing Chromebook­s, the cheap clamshell notebooks powered by Google’s free and manageable Chrome OS, which have taken the education market by storm. The resemblanc­e is not an accident: In fact, as we were writing this review, Asus let us know that a version of its Chromebook C202 would be released in September as the W202NA, a Windows 10 S-powered machine.

As with Chromebook­s, students can’t pick up a copy of Windows 10 S and load it onto their own machine. Instead, it will come preloaded onto Microsoft’s Surface Laptop or a small cadre of third-party Windows 10 S laptops priced for modest school budgets and ruggedized to withstand classrooms full of children.

So far, however, only the Surface Laptop is available. As Microsoft revealed in August, the low-cost Windows

10 S laptops won’t ship until at least September, possibly missing the back-to-school window for the 2017 school year.

For this review, we’re not considerin­g how manageable Windows 10 S is, or whether it’s a better choice for securing an academic environmen­t than Chrome OS. Instead, we’re looking at it from the user’s perspectiv­e – what it’s like to use compared to full-fledged Windows.

We tested a Microsoft-supplied Surface Laptop, which comes preloaded with Windows 10 S. We will note, however, that we upgraded the Laptop to Windows 10 Pro for benchmarki­ng. To return the Surface Laptop to Windows 10 S, we downloaded a publicly available Surface recovery image, which is something you’d normally do only if your system were malfunctio­ning. The process was pretty easy, though Microsoft says that you’ll need a USB stick of at least 16GB in size. We found it took about an hour’s worth of time to download and install the image.

Microsoft also asked us to make this crystal-clear: If you revert from Windows 10 Pro to Windows 10 S, all apps, data and settings are reverted, and will be erased from your PC.

Hey, this is (only) Windows 10

If you’re comfortabl­e working within the Windows 10 environmen­t, Windows 10 S really is almost virtually identical to Windows 10. The so-called Out of the Box Experience is identical, with Cortana walking you though setup. Once inside the operating system, nearly all Windows functions like Windows Hello,

File Manager, Cortana, Windows Ink, and the various built-in Windows apps all work identicall­y to their equivalent­s in Windows 10 Home or Pro.

In fact, Microsoft’s own summary slide points out that Windows 10 S and Windows 10 Pro are nearly identical, but with two key difference­s: Windows S is restricted to apps in the Windows Store, and you can’t join a Windows 10 S machine to a company domain. Otherwise, on both Windows 10 S and Windows 10 Pro you can use BitLocker, Windows Subsystem for Linux, and the HyperV virtual machine manager, though you may need to enable features within the Windows Features control panel.

It’s when you become bored or dissatisfi­ed with Windows that the troubles start.

For safety’s sake, Windows 10 S prohibits you from installing apps from anywhere but the Windows Store. You’ll be able to download the app, but when it comes time to install it, the Windows 10 S helicopter parent steps in (see opposite screenshot).

That means, for instance, you can’t download a game from the Steam gaming service. If you’d like to use Google’s Chrome browser, you can’t – only Edge. Windows 10 S will allow you to download an executable file from a third-party source, or transfer it onto the

PC from a USB stick. When it comes time to launch it, though, Windows 10 S will block it.

You likely have certain apps that you simply take for granted, whether they’re class requiremen­ts – like Photoshop (or GIMP), AutoCAD, or MatLab – or teaching aids for younger students, like Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing. Silly little utilities that you may have tucked away in a folder simply won’t work. Remote support solutions like LogMeIn123 also require the user to download an executable before a remote technician can log in and help you solve an issue with your PC, so this solution’s out, too. Even tried-andtrue executable ‘apps’ within Windows, such as the Command Shell or Registry Editor, are off-limits.

This can’t be overstated: The lack of flexibilit­y is the biggest reason not to invest in a Windows 10 S notebook – unless you plan to upgrade it to Windows 10 Pro.

A larger issue, in my mind, is that Windows 10 S forces you to use Microsoft’s Edge browser. While the number of available Edge extensions has climbed to 48 at the time of this writing, with excellent choices including Ghostery and LastPass, Opera, Chrome, and Firefox have thousands of plug-ins and extensions from which to choose. Importing websites and stored passwords from platform to platform simply isn’t as convenient in Edge as it is in Chrome. The bottom line is that it’s a change in behaviour that’s forced upon the user, which is sure to irritate some.

Finally, there’s Office. The Windows 10 S ‘private catalogue’ feature allows a school or university to create a sort of ‘store within the Store’ to carve out apps that a particular class might need. It won’t allow you to join the machine to a business or corporate network, though. This might not mean much, but if you had visions of saving a pound or two by connecting a business account of Office 365 to a Windows 10 S PC, it won’t work. The Surface Laptop we reviewed did come with a year’s subscripti­on to Office 365 Personal, however, which is available in a beta form. I didn’t notice any difference­s between Office 365 and the Windows 10 S versions of the apps.

Some parents will undoubtedl­y support removing the potential distractio­n of say, Overwatch, from their child’s PC. And if a school has a web-based curriculum set up for Chromebook­s, a Windows 10 S machine

should be able to step in without missing a beat. But in my mind, the lack of freedom to obtain apps that students may need robs a lot of the value from Windows 10 S, especially as children move higher in the educationa­l system.

Unfortunat­ely, the compatibil­ity issues apply to third-party hardware, too. When I tried to connect the Surface Laptop to an older Dell all-in-one printer via a USB connection, the Laptop recognized the hardware,

but wouldn’t load the driver – in other words, I couldn’t print, with no explanatio­n why. Any driver or thirdparty applicatio­n that contains scripts or executable files will be blocked by Windows 10 S, Microsoft’s support documentat­ion reveals. But that’s a lot of gobbledygo­ok to a consumer who buys a Surface Laptop for their student, then has to call Microsoft or a support tech to find out why their son or daughter can’t print a draft of their paper.

It’s worth digging though this Microsoft-compiled index of supported (and unsupporte­d) devices on Windows 10 S to see if you’ll experience the same problems I did: the vast majority of older printers aren’t supported. To be fair, setting up Google Cloud Print for a Chromebook has its own issues, which is why Google is adding local printing as an experiment­al feature in Chrome OS. Still, doesn’t it seem slightly insane to be forced to ensure your devices are compatible before buying a Windows machine?

Security and speed

You may recall that the ‘S’ in Windows 10 S supposedly stands for ‘simplicity’, ‘security’, and ‘speed’. We’ve already seen the downside of ‘simplicity’.

One of the selling points of Windows 10 S, according to Microsoft, is its resistance to ‘known ransomware’. 10 S is the company’s newest and most hardened OS, according to a company blog post. ZDNet almost immediatel­y put that claim to the test, and found that Windows 10 S could be exploited via an old workaround: Word macros. We didn’t try to

reproduce ZDNet’s results, but take Microsoft’s claim with a grain of salt.

Another thing to consider: don’t think that apps like Avast Antivirus Download Centre or Kaspersky Now – all apps that appear in the Store when you search for ‘antivirus’ – represent actual antivirus programs. They’re not. You’re dependent upon Windows Defender’s built-in firewall and antivirus – both competent, but probably not as secure as a third-party solution.

Finally, there’s speed. Microsoft claimed that Windows 10 S is faster to boot and resume than Windows 10 Pro. Originally, we found that Windows 10 S was slower than Windows 10 Pro. After retesting, we found it’s slightly quicker to boot, but also slightly slower to resume from a cold boot. Neither difference is especially significan­t.

A click away from Windows 10 Pro

You can upgrade to Windows 10 Pro through one of two ways: either by a link at the bottom of the Windows 10 S pop-ups that appear when you try and run an executable file, or by simply typing Windows 10 S Pro into the search box of the Windows Store. Either way, clicking the Install button begins the process. It doesn’t appear that you’ll actually need to download the new operating system, as I was able to upgrade without being connected to a wireless network. Windows recommends that you save and close all your files and apps before you begin the process. Backing up to OneDrive or another location would be a good idea.

When I upgraded from Windows 10 S to Windows 10 Pro, Windows informed me it was ‘preparing to switch’, rebooted once, than completed some final preparatio­ns before it launched Windows 10 Pro. All told, the process took nine minutes.

As we noted above, the switch from Windows 10 S to Windows 10 Pro is assumed to be a one-way street. That’s not necessaril­y true, as you can download and restore from a Windows 10 S disk image. But restoring Windows 10 S from that disk image will erase all files, apps, and settings.

Verdict

It’s difficult to construct a scenario where a user would want Windows 10 S. Sure, an elementary­school student with a curriculum built around the web might not care whether they use Edge or Chrome. A concerned parent trying to minimize distractio­ns for a child away at school might buy a machine running an operating system that locked out most games. Part of the issue concerns how Microsoft has attempted to stretch Windows 10 S from elementary schools all the way through college, which have vastly different requiremen­ts in terms of hardware and software.

 ??  ?? A number of Office apps are available under Windows 10 S, which appear to have the same functional­ity as they do under Office 365
A number of Office apps are available under Windows 10 S, which appear to have the same functional­ity as they do under Office 365
 ??  ?? If you try to download and install Google’s Chrome browser, a different warning pops up, encouragin­g you to open Edge instead
If you try to download and install Google’s Chrome browser, a different warning pops up, encouragin­g you to open Edge instead
 ??  ?? Sorry, no Win32 apps for you. Windows 10 S has strict protection­s in place
Sorry, no Win32 apps for you. Windows 10 S has strict protection­s in place
 ??  ?? Microsoft tries to convince you that Windows 10 S is almost Windows 10 Pro
Microsoft tries to convince you that Windows 10 S is almost Windows 10 Pro
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