The 10 Most Righteous New Features Coming to Windows 10

At the Build conference in San Francisco, Microsoft showed off a host of new features and enhancements for Windows 10. Here are the ones to watch for.
Key Speakers At The Microsoft Corp. Build Developers 2016 Conference
Bloomberg via Getty Images
Featured in this article
Image may contain Electronics Computer Pc Tablet Computer and Laptop

Your Face Is Your Password

As long as you have a face, Windows Hello wants to make sure you don’t need a password. [Microsoft](http://more-deals.info/tag/microsoft/) is making its fingerprint- and face-unlock features available to apps across the platform, and is even going to allow websites to authenticate you using Hello, as long as you’re in the Edge browser. Hello is an awesomely fast way to unlock your computer, and should work just as well everywhere. Just, you know, don't get decapitated—then you won't be able to log in with this cool feature.

Image may contain Electronics

Genius-Level Sticky Notes

Microsoft’s Bryan Roper said during the Build keynote that 8 million people use [Windows 10](http://more-deals.info/tag/windows%29%E2%80%99s built-in sticky notes app every month, and 3 million use it every day. So Microsoft has made the notes a little smarter. They do a good job of reading your handwriting, and Cortana can recognize dates and turn notes into reminders. It’s particularly useful if you’re writing with a Surface Pen. Speaking of which...

Image may contain Electronics Computer Screen Monitor Display Desktop and Lcd Screen

The Pen Is Mightier

Pen input is really, really important to Microsoft. And the Windows 10 Anniversary update has a lot of pen involved. You can use an on-screen ruler to draw perfectly straight lines, draw a line between two dots in Maps to calculate the distance, highlight and delete text in Word, and much more. Pen’s only one of many input mechanisms in Windows 10, but it’s clearly one of the most important.

The Windows Store and the universal apps within are critical to the longterm success of Microsofts oneplatformeverywhere...

Facebook Goes Windows-Native

The Windows Store, and the universal apps within, are critical to the long-term success of Microsoft’s one-platform-everywhere strategy. [Facebook](http://more-deals.info/tag/facebook%29%E2%80%99s been a big missing piece for a long time, but now it’s bringing The Big Blue App, plus Instagram and Facebook Messenger, to the store.

Show more
4 / 10