Karlston Posted July 25, 2020 Share Posted July 25, 2020 This is the new Windows 10 Modern Disk Management Tool Microsoft has for some years been working to replace the old Windows NT-based Control Panel tools with new Modern equivalents and now the work has reached the Disk Management Tool in Windows 10. Windows 10 Build 20175 includes a new Modern Disk Management Tool, currently hidden, which seems to be nearly ready to get the job done. The tool is currently able to change drive letters, change the size of the drive and otherwise let you repartition it. It is still pretty basic and is still a work in progress, but for many users, it should be able to get the job done. For those on Windows 10 20175, you can find the new tool under Settings > Storage> “Manage Disks and Volumes”. Via WindowsLatest This is the new Windows 10 Modern Disk Management Tool Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Microsoft has for some years been working to replace the old Windows NT-based Control Panel tools with new Modern equivalents and now the work has reached the Disk Management Tool in Windows 10. Windows 10 Build 20175 includes a new Modern Disk Management Tool, currently hidden, which seems to be nearly ready to get the job done.
straycat19 Posted July 26, 2020 Share Posted July 26, 2020 Wonder how many CVE's and updates this tool will cause to be generated over the next 10 years? If Microsoft was a car manufacturer we would all be walking still. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gyro21 Posted July 26, 2020 Share Posted July 26, 2020 On 7/26/2020 at 7:53 PM, straycat19 said: Wonder how many CVE's and updates this tool will cause to be generated over the next 10 years? If Microsoft was a car manufacturer we would all be walking still. Expand The sad true ... I read some of your comments, do you use Windows 7, right??? I really wish to migrate to Ubuntu, but I use some Autodesk software (AutoCAD, Inventor, Fusion 360), I play videogames and I have a Sound Blaster Z (it will not be as powerful and customizable as in Windows). MATLAB, Wolfram Mathematica, Atom, VSCode, Juno, Anaconda, Intellij IDEA are linux-native apps but there are software like AIMP, Microsoft Teams, PotPlayer that their Wine equivalent are simply horrible. What do you think bro?? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
straycat19 Posted July 26, 2020 Share Posted July 26, 2020 On 7/26/2020 at 8:22 PM, Gyro21 said: The sad true ... I read some of your comments, do you use Windows 7, right??? I really wish to migrate to Ubuntu, but I use some Autodesk software (AutoCAD, Inventor, Fusion 360), I play videogames and I have a Sound Blaster Z (it will not be as powerful and customizable as in Windows). MATLAB, Wolfram Mathematica, Atom, VSCode, Juno, Anaconda, Intellij IDEA are linux-native apps but there are software like AIMP, Microsoft Teams, PotPlayer that their Wine equivalent are simply horrible. What do you think bro?? Expand OS is usually chosen based upon how secure you can make it (none are secure as installed), what programs require what OS, (some of the scientific hardware in the university I worked for required Windows 98 and a computer with a PCMCIA slot to connect), and personal preferences. I have more computers than a sane man should be allowed to have (53 at last count) and run a mix of Windows, MacOS, and Linux on them. Some are set up for penetration testing, some for forensics, a couple for games, etc. Each has a different function and therefore a different OS. In OSes, one size does not fit all. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gyro21 Posted July 27, 2020 Share Posted July 27, 2020 On 7/26/2020 at 10:17 PM, straycat19 said: OS is usually chosen based upon how secure you can make it (none are secure as installed), what programs require what OS, (some of the scientific hardware in the university I worked for required Windows 98 and a computer with a PCMCIA slot to connect), and personal preferences. I have more computers than a sane man should be allowed to have (53 at last count) and run a mix of Windows, MacOS, and Linux on them. Some are set up for penetration testing, some for forensics, a couple for games, etc. Each has a different function and therefore a different OS. In OSes, one size does not fit all. Expand Great experience sharing bro haha So, your advice is to have more than 50 computers for each task: One for listening to music, another for watching YouTube, another for browsing Facebook, another for write Word documents and maybe one exclusively for watching p0rn. Nice mate, you made my day. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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