
But that's still there to access apps you don't use that often. To my mind it works faster this way than with the old-style start menu. Frequently used apps plus shortcuts to folders mainly. As for the start menu, I've set it (in W10) to go full screen and I've then added/removed tiles according to how I want the PC set up. The latter is a non-issue as everything I've installed has just worked. 1) lack of a start menu and b) old programs wouldn't install/work. Installed W10 and played with some setup (personalisation) options and now don't miss XP at all. The PC went to that old pc scrapyeard in the sky (MB gave up) so I managed to blag a 3 year old quad-core, 16GB (yes, sixteen. I was too until recently, running Win XP Pro on a 12 year old PC (but with Office 2010 - student version as my son is at school). Not sure though with all the changes to Office though.Īs for being an 'ole reprobate' I can empathise with this. Click to expand.Yep, you need later versions of Office to get Onenote BUT, and you'd have to check it out yourself, you may be able to download a standalone version depending on your Windows version.
