Windows-10 preview for Mobiles

windows-10 for mobiles - smscube.net

Microsoft opened up its Windows 10 Technical Preview to Windows Phone users last month, but only a scant few Lumia devices were supported.
That’s soon about to change. Microsoft has announced a second round of devices that will be able to run the very latest builds of Windows-10, and the good news is that the list has expanded considerably. The bad news is that there are still a few notable absences, including the Lumia 930 and any HTC Windows Phone devices.

LUMIA 930 NOT YET SUPPORTED

Of course, you should still sit down for a minute and consider if you really want to install the Windows 10 Technical Preview on your phone. If your Windows Phone is your daily driver, it’s probably not a good idea — the operating system is still rough around the edges. Dual-SIM features are still severely lacking, and Messaging lacks, search, message drafts, voice notes, spam filters, support for multiple attachments, and other features. In addition, Cortana only speaks English and Internet Tethering will break your phone if you don’t turn it off before powering down your device.

The next Windows-10 build will likely come out next week — below is the preliminary list of all the devices it will support.

Lumia 1020
Lumia 1320
Lumia 1520
Lumia 520
Lumia 525
Lumia 526
Lumia 530
Lumia 530 Dual Sim
Lumia 535
Lumia 620
Lumia 625
Lumia 630
Lumia 630 Dual Sim
Lumia 635
Lumia 636
Lumia 638
Lumia 720
Lumia 730
Lumia 730 Dual SIM
Lumia 735
Lumia 810
Lumia 820
Lumia 822
Lumia 830
Lumia 920
Lumia 925
Lumia 928
Lumia ICON
Microsoft Lumia 430
Microsoft Lumia 435
Microsoft Lumia 435 Dual SIM
Microsoft Lumia 435 Dual SIM DTV
Microsoft Lumia 532
Microsoft Lumia 532 Dual SIM
Microsoft Lumia 640 Dual SIM
Microsoft Lumia 535 Dual SIM

Correction: The Rooms feature has been discontinued on Windows Phone and will not be supported in Windows 10. You will lose access to your Rooms chat history if you upgrade. An earlier version of this article implied that support in Windows 10 was still in development — we regret the error.

posted via: The Verge