X



トップページ海外AKB48G
509コメント382KB
テストスレ©2ch.net
0132 【だん吉】 (オッペケ Sr23-fH69)垢版2018/05/05(土) 21:27:27.90ID:9S5aUbmJr
むん
0133名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 9983-InwY)垢版2018/06/04(月) 09:20:22.69ID:iU+fbPLi0
NREF4
0134名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ d919-ZWpy)垢版2018/06/09(土) 12:47:33.57ID:9fmEpgYs0
tesuto
0141名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (コンニチワ 085e-H6zv)垢版2019/05/05(日) 22:21:38.19ID:W91WCOHB8
test
0142名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (コンニチワ 08f7-H6zv)垢版2019/05/05(日) 22:23:23.18ID:szcNYSz/8
てすと
0143名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 0628-H6zv)垢版2019/05/05(日) 22:36:05.45ID:GnvO6cB+0
test
0149名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ eba4-uI9O)垢版2021/08/09(月) 17:16:37.30ID:+U+x/J2C0
孙芮
0232名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 4288-+8Lt)垢版2022/08/16(火) 14:27:20.60ID:PZZJ7XcW0
テスト
0233名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 4955-b/ni)垢版2022/08/16(火) 15:14:47.15ID:SmOD9flU0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[180.33.142.251] (ワッチョイ) 4955-b/ni
HOST NAME: p725251-ipngn200605sizuokaden.shizuoka.ocn.ne.jp.
IP: 180.33.142.251
-- Results
Burned BBQ (Proxy20) Registered:20220809-120301
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59 Windows/6.3.9600
MonaKey: e9981d99a8....
0297名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (初段) (ワッチョイ 9954-qJge)垢版2022/08/17(水) 18:20:40.65ID:cruzTiLY0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.126.203.31] (ワッチョイ) 9954-qJge
HOST NAME: softbank126126203031.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.126.203.31
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle_Android/2.3.3 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; 901SH Build/RKQ1.210205.001)
MonaKey: 3a60ba5fab....
0298名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (初段) (ワッチョイ 9954-KkV0)垢版2022/08/17(水) 18:28:24.65ID:cruzTiLY0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.126.203.31] (ワッチョイ) 9954-KkV0
HOST NAME: softbank126126203031.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.126.203.31
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle_Android/2.3.3 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; SH-M19 Build/S6073)
MonaKey: a01c22d2c0....
0307名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ c655-Ti6X)垢版2022/08/18(木) 03:33:24.39ID:evtiouT40

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[223.218.92.227] (ワッチョイ) c655-Ti6X
HOST NAME: i223-218-92-227.s41.a007.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 223.218.92.227
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/6.0.6000 Windows/6.0.6001 Windpws/6.0.6002 Windows/6.0.6003 Windpws/6.1.7600 Windows/6.1.7601 Windows/6.2.9200 Windows/6.3.9600
MonaKey: e0da977d47....
0308名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ c655-BEp6)垢版2022/08/18(木) 03:34:26.68ID:evtiouT40

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[223.218.92.227] (ワッチョイ) c655-BEp6
HOST NAME: i223-218-92-227.s41.a007.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 223.218.92.227
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/6.0.6000 Windows/6.0.6001 Windpws/6.0.6002 Windows/6.0.6003 Windpws/6.1.7600 Windows/6.1.7601 Windows/6.2.9200 Windows/6.3.9600 Windows/10.0.10240 Windows/10.0.10586 Windows/10.0.14393 Windows/10.0.15063
MonaKey: ca826770a2....
0309名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ c655-+UO4)垢版2022/08/18(木) 03:35:23.28ID:evtiouT40

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[223.218.92.227] (ワッチョイ) c655-+UO4
HOST NAME: i223-218-92-227.s41.a007.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 223.218.92.227
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/6.0.6000 Windows/6.0.6001 Windpws/6.0.6002 Windows/6.0.6003 Windpws/6.1.7600 Windows/6.1.7601 Windows/6.2.9200 Windows/6.3.9600 Windows/10.0.10240 Windows/10.0.10586 Windows/10.0.14393 Windows/10.0.15063 Windows/10.0.16299
MonaKey: bc106689e9....
0310名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ c655-0jvR)垢版2022/08/18(木) 03:36:53.90ID:evtiouT40

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[223.218.92.227] (ワッチョイ) c655-0jvR
HOST NAME: i223-218-92-227.s41.a007.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 223.218.92.227
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/6.0.6000 Windows/6.0.6001 Windpws/6.0.6002 Windows/6.0.6003 Windpws/6.1.7600 Windows/6.1.7601 Windows/6.2.9200 Windows/6.3.9600 Windows/10.0.10240 Windows/10.0.10586 Windows/10.0.14393 Windows/10.0.15063 Windows/10.0.16299 Windows/10.0.17134 Windows/10.0.17763 Windows/10.0.18362 Windows/10.0.18363 Windows/10.0.19041 Windows/10.0.19042 Windows/10.0.19043 Windows/10.0.19044 Windows/10.0.19045
MonaKey: c368f38570....
0311名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4段) (ワッチョイ 924b-DxiR)垢版2022/08/18(木) 03:49:29.62ID:jpb/F6/f0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[101.143.9.189] (ワッチョイ) 924b-DxiR
HOST NAME: 101-143-9-189f1.nar1.eonet.ne.jp.
IP: 101.143.9.189
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/6.0.6000 Windows/6.0.6001 Windows/6.0.6002 Windows/6.0.6003 Windows/6.1.7600 Windows/6.1.7601 Windows/6.2.9200 Windows/6.3.9600 Windows/10.0.10240 Windows/10.0.10586 Windows/10.0.14393 Windows/10.0.15063 Windows/10.0.16299 Windows/10.0.17134 Windows/10.0.17763 Windows/10.0.18362 Windows/10.0.18363 Windows/10.0.19041 Windows/10.0.19042 Windows/10.0.19043 Windows/10.0.19044 Windows/10.0.19045 Windows/10.0.20270 Windows/10.0.20277 Windows/10.0.20279 Windows/10.0.21277 Windows/10.0.21286 Windows/10.0.21292 Windows/10.0.21296 Windows/10.0.21301 Windows/10.0.21313 Windows/10.0.21318 Windows/10.0.21322 Windows/10.0.21327 Windows/10.0.21332 Windows/10.0.21337 Windows/10.0.21343 Windows/10.0.21354 Windows/10.0.21359 Windows/10.0.21364 Windows/10.0.21370 Windows/10.0.21376 Windows/10.0.21382 Windows/10.0.21387 Windows/10.0.21390 Windows/10.0.22000 Windows/10.0.22449 Windows/10.0.22454 Windows/10.0.22458 Windows/10.0.22463 Windows/10.0.22468 Windows/10.0.22471 Windows/10.0.22478 Windows/10.0.22483 Windows/10.0.22489 Windows/10.0.22494 Windows/10.0.22499 Windows/10.0.22504 Windows/10.0.22509 Windows/10.0.22518 Windows/10.0.22523 Windows/10.0.22526 Windows/10.0.22533 Windows/10.0.22538 Windows/10.0.22543 Windows/10.0.22557 Windows/10.0.22563 Windows/10.0.22567 Windows/10.0.22572 Windows/10.0.22579 Windows/10.0.22581 Windows/10.0.22593 Windows/10.0.22598 Windows/10.0.22610 Windows/10.0.22616 Windows/10.0.22621 Windows/10.0.22622 Windows/10.0.25115 Windows/10.0.25120 Windows/10.0.25126 Windows/10.0.25131 Windows/10.0.25136 Windows/10.0.25140 Windows/10.0.25145 Windows/10.0.25151 Windows/10.0.25158 Windows/10.0.25163 Windows/10.0.25169 Windows/10.0.25174 Windows/10.0.25179
MonaKey: 9dfbe1921d....
0342名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (1級) (ワッチョイ d2fb-oKeI)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:07:23.70ID:44tt5s170

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[133.114.108.213] (ワッチョイ) d2fb-oKeI
HOST NAME: fp85726cd5.chbd106.ap.nuro.jp.
IP: 133.114.108.213
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015. Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support. Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025. Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release. Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release; that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020. By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide. As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs, still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%, since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console) are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021. Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM). Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 445990c780....
0343名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 8240-i5/X)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:37:30.85ID:1vZGqk4C0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[203.136.77.110] (ワッチョイ) 8240-i5/X
HOST NAME: FL1-203-136-77-110.kng.mesh.ad.jp.
IP: 203.136.77.110
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 57b13c368f....
0344名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 8240-ZsR1)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:38:16.18ID:1vZGqk4C0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[203.136.77.110] (ワッチョイ) 8240-ZsR1
HOST NAME: FL1-203-136-77-110.kng.mesh.ad.jp.
IP: 203.136.77.110
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: f5c11be232....
0345名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 8240-EUQX)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:38:53.83ID:1vZGqk4C0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[203.136.77.110] (ワッチョイ) 8240-EUQX
HOST NAME: FL1-203-136-77-110.kng.mesh.ad.jp.
IP: 203.136.77.110
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: ed428fd46c....
0346名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 8240-D/0O)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:39:31.02ID:1vZGqk4C0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[203.136.77.110] (ワッチョイ) 8240-D/0O
HOST NAME: FL1-203-136-77-110.kng.mesh.ad.jp.
IP: 203.136.77.110
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: b26abfecc0....
0347名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4級) (ワッチョイ 8981-+hrt)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:45:39.01ID:9CUzpnCa0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[116.94.9.158] (ワッチョイ) 8981-+hrt
HOST NAME: 116-94-9-158.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 116.94.9.158
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 577438f1bf....
0348名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4級) (ワッチョイ 8981-pRI2)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:46:06.76ID:9CUzpnCa0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[116.94.9.158] (ワッチョイ) 8981-pRI2
HOST NAME: 116-94-9-158.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 116.94.9.158
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 8f96df2cbd....
0349名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (1級) (ワッチョイ 9954-Pm/G)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:47:23.09ID:foY9Opxf0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.114.197.67] (ワッチョイ) 9954-Pm/G
HOST NAME: softbank126114197067.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.114.197.67
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 38a1c094b9....
0350名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (1級) (ワッチョイ 9954-L/e3)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:47:48.17ID:foY9Opxf0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.114.197.67] (ワッチョイ) 9954-L/e3
HOST NAME: softbank126114197067.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.114.197.67
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 692ef58226....
0351名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (1級) (ワッチョイ 9954-alhk)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:48:38.83ID:foY9Opxf0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.114.197.67] (ワッチョイ) 9954-alhk
HOST NAME: softbank126114197067.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.114.197.67
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: cf69a75ecd....
0352名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (1級) (ワッチョイ 9954-vgjS)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:49:00.17ID:foY9Opxf0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.114.197.67] (ワッチョイ) 9954-vgjS
HOST NAME: softbank126114197067.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.114.197.67
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 5baeb599ef....
0353名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4段) (ワッチョイ e287-MPiP)垢版2022/08/18(木) 17:50:08.00ID:h6VVa/pw0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[211.13.44.250] (ワッチョイ) e287-MPiP
HOST NAME: FL1-211-13-44-250.ehm.mesh.ad.jp.
IP: 211.13.44.250
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 4e7b9c1aaa....
0354名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4段) (JP 0H35-Y+ej)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:00:34.83ID:4PdG8l1eH

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[58.147.238.114] (JP) 0H35-Y+ej
HOST NAME: None
IP: 58.147.238.114
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2���the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0���of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets-they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: cbed1dc0bc....
0355名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4段) (JP 0H35-jMgo)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:01:02.89ID:4PdG8l1eH

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[58.147.238.114] (JP) 0H35-jMgo
HOST NAME: None
IP: 58.147.238.114
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets-窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in___ Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: cd7cc8d13e....
0356名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4段) (JP 0H35-gyBi)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:01:36.66ID:4PdG8l1eH

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[58.147.238.114] (JP) 0H35-gyBi
HOST NAME: None
IP: 58.147.238.114
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets-窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in.... Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 1406c93e06....
0357名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4段) (ワッチョイ fdf7-SkAo)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:04:18.22ID:0bF5EdYZ0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[160.13.192.120] (ワッチョイ) fdf7-SkAo
HOST NAME: 120.192.13.160.dy.iij4u.or.jp.
IP: 160.13.192.120
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets-窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in....aaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: b8743fca8e....
0358名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ c281-l34k)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:06:25.38ID:I5O3eGKU0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[125.56.25.219] (ワッチョイ) c281-l34k
HOST NAME: 125-56-25-219.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 125.56.25.219
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets-窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in....aaaaaa Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: db38f76f4e....
0359名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ c281-+3cK)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:07:33.49ID:I5O3eGKU0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[125.56.25.219] (ワッチョイ) c281-+3cK
HOST NAME: 125-56-25-219.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 125.56.25.219
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶坂披荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 48e9aa5ab6....
0360名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ c281-+3cK)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:09:29.10ID:I5O3eGKU0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[125.56.25.219] (ワッチョイ) c281-+3cK
HOST NAME: 125-56-25-219.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 125.56.25.219
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶-窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 7cd02f2347....
0361名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ c281-dfuo)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:10:52.78ID:I5O3eGKU0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[125.56.25.219] (ワッチョイ) c281-dfuo
HOST NAME: 125-56-25-219.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 125.56.25.219
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶 窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: b06d1db348....
0362名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ c281-2gdc)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:11:18.74ID:I5O3eGKU0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[125.56.25.219] (ワッチョイ) c281-2gdc
HOST NAME: 125-56-25-219.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 125.56.25.219
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶 窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September. Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: e24118ee4f....
0363名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 45e8-OZ1e)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:22:39.54ID:I978bFPH0
test
Region: [JP]
QUERY:[210.165.136.60] (ワッチョイ) 45e8-OZ1e
HOST NAME: pl45116.ag2525.nttpc.ne.jp.
IP: 210.165.136.60
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶 窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 086f68178c....
0364名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 45e8-dfuo)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:24:47.65ID:I978bFPH0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[210.165.136.60] (ワッチョイ) 45e8-dfuo
HOST NAME: pl45116.ag2525.nttpc.ne.jp.
IP: 210.165.136.60
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets 窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: c1bb4cae93....
0365名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 45e8-2gdc)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:25:51.91ID:I978bFPH0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[210.165.136.60] (ワッチョイ) 45e8-2gdc
HOST NAME: pl45116.ag2525.nttpc.ne.jp.
IP: 210.165.136.60
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September. Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: e2b1ee3a84....
0366名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 45e8-D/O/)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:26:21.78ID:I978bFPH0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[210.165.136.60] (ワッチョイ) 45e8-D/O/
HOST NAME: pl45116.ag2525.nttpc.ne.jp.
IP: 210.165.136.60
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September..... Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 47e071bd02....
0367名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3級) (ワッチョイ 421c-onSS)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:28:00.23ID:IlCXoeLk0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[219.104.38.158] (ワッチョイ) 421c-onSS
HOST NAME: fpdb68269e.ap.nuro.jp.
IP: 219.104.38.158
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September...... Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 8ee094d93d....
0368名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3級) (ワッチョイ 421c-1lkS)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:28:25.93ID:IlCXoeLk0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[219.104.38.158] (ワッチョイ) 421c-1lkS
HOST NAME: fpdb68269e.ap.nuro.jp.
IP: 219.104.38.158
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September....... Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: d4b849f97a....
0369名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3級) (ワッチョイ 421c-aqqj)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:28:43.25ID:IlCXoeLk0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[219.104.38.158] (ワッチョイ) 421c-aqqj
HOST NAME: fpdb68269e.ap.nuro.jp.
IP: 219.104.38.158
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September......... Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 2940bd6ad4....
0370名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3級) (ワッチョイ 421c-U16O)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:29:48.31ID:IlCXoeLk0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[219.104.38.158] (ワッチョイ) 421c-U16O
HOST NAME: fpdb68269e.ap.nuro.jp.
IP: 219.104.38.158
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September.......... Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: bb0cd79823....
0371名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (6級) (ワッチョイ 4288-053o)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:38:04.43ID:jbvV95vY0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[27.84.54.16] (ワッチョイ) 4288-053o
HOST NAME: KD027084054016.ppp-bb.dion.ne.jp.
IP: 27.84.54.16
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶 窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: ec44c7a0ca....
0372名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (6級) (ワッチョイ 4288-dfuo)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:38:26.14ID:jbvV95vY0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[27.84.54.16] (ワッチョイ) 4288-dfuo
HOST NAME: KD027084054016.ppp-bb.dion.ne.jp.
IP: 27.84.54.16
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets they'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] followed by a further screenshot of a build identifying itself as Windows Technical Preview, numbered 9834, in September Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 7f297500e4....
0373名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (2段) (ワッチョイ ad81-053o)垢版2022/08/18(木) 18:48:26.93ID:/VoXNnYw0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[58.3.177.112] (ワッチョイ) ad81-053o
HOST NAME: 58-3-177-112.ppp.bbiq.jp.
IP: 58.3.177.112
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to navigationJump to searchThis article is about the operating system for personal computers. For the related (now discontinued) operating system for mobile devices, see Windows 10 Mobile.Not to be confused with Windows 1.0.Windows 10 is a major release of Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. It is the direct successor to Windows 8.1, which was released nearly two years earlier. It was released to manufacturing on July 15, 2015, and later to retail on July 29, 2015.[18] Windows 10 was made available for download via MSDN and TechNet, as a free upgrade for retail copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 users via the Windows Store, and to Windows 7 users via Windows Update. Windows 10 receives new builds on an ongoing basis, which are available at no additional cost to users, in addition to additional test builds of Windows 10, which are available to Windows Insiders. Devices in enterprise environments can receive these updates at a slower pace, or use long-term support milestones that only receive critical updates, such as security patches, over their ten-year lifespan of extended support.[19][20] Microsoft has stated that extended support for Windows 10 editions which are not in the Long-Term Servicing Channel will end on October 14, 2025.[16]Windows 10 received generally positive reviews upon its original release. Critics praised Microsoft's decision to provide the desktop-oriented interface in line with previous versions of Windows, contrasting the tablet-oriented approach of Windows 8, although Windows 10's touch-oriented user interface mode was criticized for containing regressions upon the touch-oriented interface of its predecessor. Critics also praised the improvements to Windows 10's bundled software over Windows 8.1, Xbox Live integration, as well as the functionality and capabilities of the Cortana personal assistant and the replacement of Internet Explorer with Microsoft Edge. However, media outlets have been critical of the changes to operating system behaviors, including mandatory update installation, privacy concerns over data collection performed by the OS for Microsoft and its partners, and adware-like tactics used to promote the operating system on its release.[21]Microsoft initially aimed to have Windows 10 installed on over one billion devices within three years of its release;[19] that goal was ultimately reached almost five years after release on March 16, 2020.[22] By January 2018, Windows 10 surpassed Windows 7 as the most popular version of Windows worldwide.[23] As of August 2022, Windows 10 is estimated to have a 72% share of Windows PCs,[23] still 6.2テ the share of its successor Windows 11 (and 6.0テ of Windows 7). The share has been declining from a January 2022 peak of 82%,[24] since Windows 11, which is now the second most popular Windows version in many countries. Windows 10 has a 58% share of all PCs (the rest being other Windows editions and other operating systems such as macOS and Linux), and a 22% share of all devices (including mobile, tablet and console)[25] are running Windows 10. On June 24, 2021, Microsoft announced Windows 10's successor, Windows 11, which was released on October 5, 2021.[26]Windows 10 is the final version of Windows which supports 32-bit processors (IA-32 and ARMv7-based) and devices with BIOS firmware. Its successor, Windows 11, requires a device that uses UEFI firmware and a 64-bit processor in any supported architecture (x86-64 for x86 and ARMv8 for ARM).[27] DevelopmentAt the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in 2011, Andrew Lees, the chief of Microsoft's mobile technologies, said that the company intended to have a single software ecosystem for PCs, phones, tablets, and other devices: We won't have an ecosystem for PCs, and one for phones, and one for tablets窶 窶荊hey'll all come together.[28][29]In December 2013, technology writer Mary Jo Foley reported that Microsoft was working on an update to Windows 8 codenamed Threshold, after a planet in its Halo franchise.[30] Similarly to Blue (which became Windows 8.1),[31] Foley described Threshold, not as a single operating system, but as a wave of operating systems across multiple Microsoft platforms and services, quoting Microsoft sources, scheduled for the second quarter of 2015. She also stated that one of the goals for Threshold was to create a unified application platform and development toolkit for Windows, Windows Phone and Xbox One (which all use a similar kernel based on Windows NT).[30][32]At the Build Conference in April 2014, Microsoft's Terry Myerson unveiled an updated version of Windows 8.1 (build 9697) that added the ability to run Windows Store apps inside desktop windows and a more traditional Start menu in place of the Start screen seen in Windows 8. The new Start menu takes after Windows 7's design by using only a portion of the screen and including a Windows 7-style application listing in the first column. The second column displays Windows 8-style app tiles. Myerson said that these changes would occur in a future update, but did not elaborate.[33][34] Microsoft also unveiled the concept of a universal Windows app, allowing Windows Store apps created for Windows 8.1 to be ported to Windows Phone 8.1 and Xbox One while sharing a common codebase, with an interface designed for different device form factors, and allowing user data and licenses for an app to be shared between multiple platforms. Windows Phone 8.1 would share nearly 90% of the common Windows Runtime APIs with Windows 8.1 on PCs.[33][35][36][37]Screenshots of a Windows build purported to be Threshold were leaked in July 2014, showing the previously presented Start menu and windowed Windows Store apps,[32] Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: ec44c7a0ca....
0396名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 4288-VErf)垢版2022/08/19(金) 08:59:34.93ID:NRM6Jv4S0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[27.138.251.136] (ワッチョイ) 4288-VErf
HOST NAME: 27-138-251-136.rev.home.ne.jp.
IP: 27.138.251.136
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲�キ�笏�シャ�会ス厄ス�箔
縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲笏(�溪��) 笏
縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲縲笏5ch笏!!

Windows/10.0.22499
MonaKey: 524d023ed6....
0397名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 4288-8hLK)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:00:23.92ID:NRM6Jv4S0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[27.138.251.136] (ワッチョイ) 4288-8hLK
HOST NAME: 27-138-251-136.rev.home.ne.jp.
IP: 27.138.251.136
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!

Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 789de89b79....
0398名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 4288-lSwd)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:04:30.31ID:NRM6Jv4S0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[27.138.251.136] (ワッチョイ) 4288-lSwd
HOST NAME: 27-138-251-136.rev.home.ne.jp.
IP: 27.138.251.136
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!

Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: d4485e6f72....
0399名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (3段) (ワッチョイ 4288-n73N)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:05:22.31ID:NRM6Jv4S0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[27.138.251.136] (ワッチョイ) 4288-n73N
HOST NAME: 27-138-251-136.rev.home.ne.jp.
IP: 27.138.251.136
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!

Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 871c727f5b....
0400名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-/gym)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:08:48.59ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-/gym
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           
キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!


Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 3883aee18a....
0401名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-Pu6O)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:17:12.82ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-Pu6O
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live
            (゚∀゚)
            5ch━!!

Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 0efde173d4....
0402名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-yCQV)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:22:04.91ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-yCQV
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚)
            ┗5ch━!!

Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 4685ff14c9....
0403名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-VqV/)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:22:58.08ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-VqV/
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚)
            ┗5ch━!!


Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 74084e2f3d....
0404名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-9p+f)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:24:15.42ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-9p+f
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!


Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: de3e9d093b....
0405名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-9p+f)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:32:23.32ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-9p+f
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!


Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: de3e9d093b....
0408名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7級) (ワッチョイ 8154-9p+f)垢版2022/08/19(金) 09:38:48.12ID:oPt/dy+z0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.79.217.235] (ワッチョイ) 8154-9p+f
HOST NAME: softbank060079217235.bbtec.net.
IP: 60.79.217.235
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59

           キタ━Live┓
            ┏(゚∀゚) ┛
            ┗5ch━!!


Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: de3e9d093b....
0418名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5段) (アークセー Sxf1-JJxg)垢版2022/08/19(金) 11:42:08.33ID:FxK2rWvfx

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.149.164.187] (アークセー) Sxf1-JJxg
HOST NAME: ai126149164187.54.access-internet.ne.jp.
IP: 126.149.164.187
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle_Android/2.3.3 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; 902SH)
MonaKey: 72790cfa77....
0431名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (4級) (ワッチョイ c2e6-bMqY)垢版2022/08/19(金) 14:22:06.74ID:trI/nWyG0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[123.224.113.97] (ワッチョイ) c2e6-bMqY
HOST NAME: p1297097-ipngn11701hodogaya.kanagawa.ocn.ne.jp.
IP: 123.224.113.97
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle_Android/2.3.3 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; Pixel 6 Build/SQ3A.220705.003)
MonaKey: cc1de46b02....
0437名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 81f7-Ky2F)垢版2022/08/19(金) 18:32:21.23ID:2ZS3B4/b0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.39.166.251] (ワッチョイ) 81f7-Ky2F
HOST NAME: p2237251-ipngn2502funabasi.chiba.ocn.ne.jp.
IP: 60.39.166.251
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23

専ブラ UA
JaneStyle for Windows Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/10.0.22000
Live5ch Monazilla/1.00 Live5ch/1.59 Windows/10.0.22000


Windows/6.1.7600
MonaKey: fca020150d....
0438名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (7段) (ワッチョイ 81f7-1HmB)垢版2022/08/19(金) 18:38:19.85ID:2ZS3B4/b0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[60.39.166.251] (ワッチョイ) 81f7-1HmB
HOST NAME: p2237251-ipngn2502funabasi.chiba.ocn.ne.jp.
IP: 60.39.166.251
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23

Windows10 User-Agent
- Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/10.0.10240
1511 Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/10.0.10586
1607 Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23 Windows/10.0.14393


Windows/6.1.7600
MonaKey: dc337519ee....
0451名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (2級) (ワッチョイ 9954-ZcS1)垢版2022/08/19(金) 21:44:35.54ID:hC/Un3DO0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.109.178.96] (ワッチョイ) 9954-ZcS1
HOST NAME: softbank126109178096.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.109.178.96
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 En2ch/1.4.21 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; 901SH Build/RKQ1.210205.001)
MonaKey: 21e85ef756....
0452名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (2級) (ワッチョイ 9954-ZcS1)垢版2022/08/19(金) 21:54:40.89ID:hC/Un3DO0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.109.178.96] (ワッチョイ) 9954-ZcS1
HOST NAME: softbank126109178096.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.109.178.96
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 En2ch/1.4.21 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; 901SH Build/RKQ1.210205.001)
MonaKey: 21e85ef756....
0454名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ 9f54-6Et0)垢版2022/08/20(土) 00:01:02.35ID:+KbiwfYZ0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[126.220.11.212] (ワッチョイ) 9f54-6Et0
HOST NAME: softbank126220011212.bbtec.net.
IP: 126.220.11.212
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Ciisaa/1.72 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; 901SH Build/RKQ1.210205.001)
MonaKey: 999898b551....
0455名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ 1f55-/Xfe)垢版2022/08/20(土) 02:28:38.74ID:p3JLGkD20

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[114.185.0.48] (ワッチョイ) 1f55-/Xfe
HOST NAME: i114-185-0-48.s42.a014.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 114.185.0.48
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 Ciisaa/1.71 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; Pixel 6 Build/SP2A.220305.001)
MonaKey: be74bdd318....
0457名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ 1f55-sTyK)垢版2022/08/20(土) 03:24:33.90ID:p3JLGkD20

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[114.185.0.48] (ワッチョイ) 1f55-sTyK
HOST NAME: i114-185-0-48.s42.a014.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 114.185.0.48
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 2chGear/1.1.3 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; Pixel 6 Build/SP2A.220305.001)
MonaKey: 81b3c9659f....
0459名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (無能) (ワッチョイ 1f55-bzRe)垢版2022/08/20(土) 03:36:28.49ID:p3JLGkD20

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[114.185.0.48] (ワッチョイ) 1f55-bzRe
HOST NAME: i114-185-0-48.s42.a014.ap.plala.or.jp.
IP: 114.185.0.48
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 2chMate/0.8.10.153 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 12; 901SH Build/RKQ1.210205.001)
MonaKey: 5363763e0b....
0460名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ 7f2b-WRtj)垢版2022/08/20(土) 03:41:04.34ID:VSEln4IO0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[133.218.20.37] (ワッチョイ) 7f2b-WRtj
HOST NAME: 37.20.218.133.dy.bbexcite.jp.
IP: 133.218.20.37
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 2chMate/0.8.10.153 Dalvik/2.1.0 (Linux; U; Android 9; ASUS_X00QD Build/PPR1.180610.009)
MonaKey: 32778ab201....
0469名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ 7f2b-tQed)垢版2022/08/20(土) 12:50:53.62ID:WpFDbuvj0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[133.218.3.27] (ワッチョイ) 7f2b-tQed
HOST NAME: 27.3.218.133.dy.bbexcite.jp.
IP: 133.218.3.27
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: b1e1dfade9....
0475名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ 7f2b-tQed)垢版2022/08/20(土) 12:59:10.61ID:WpFDbuvj0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[133.218.3.27] (ワッチョイ) 7f2b-tQed
HOST NAME: 27.3.218.133.dy.bbexcite.jp.
IP: 133.218.3.27
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: e6cda99693....
0476名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ 7f2b-tQed)垢版2022/08/20(土) 12:59:44.19ID:WpFDbuvj0

Region: [JP]
QUERY:[133.218.3.27] (ワッチョイ) 7f2b-tQed
HOST NAME: 27.3.218.133.dy.bbexcite.jp.
IP: 133.218.3.27
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: ab92d584e7....
0477名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (5級) (ワッチョイ 7f2b-tQed)垢版2022/08/20(土) 13:03:11.46ID:WpFDbuvj0
どう
Region: [JP]
QUERY:[133.218.3.27] (ワッチョイ) 7f2b-tQed
HOST NAME: 27.3.218.133.dy.bbexcite.jp.
IP: 133.218.3.27
-- Results
NONE
-- End of job.
User-Agent: Monazilla/1.00 JaneStyle/4.23                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Windows/10.0.22000
MonaKey: 10e792f2c2....
0506名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 0beb-l5OQ)垢版2023/10/17(火) 17:46:32.66ID:o7Lhghgl0
用音乐“联结”中日 谷村新司:让下一代继续做朋友
2023-10-16 17:22:54 看看新闻Knews综合

据日本NHK电视台16日报道,日本歌手谷村新司10月8日因病在东京都内的医院去世,终年74岁。他于今年3月因急性肠炎进行了手术并住院接受治疗。

公开消息显示,谷村新司生于1948年,被誉为日本乐坛国宝级人物。他一生创作并演唱了大量作品,其中最知名的包括《星》《花》《浪漫铁道》等,有近50首歌曲被改编成中文歌曲,被邓丽君、张国荣、张学友等华语乐坛巨星翻唱。

谷村新司的影响不仅局限于日本,在亚洲多个国家和地区以及全球都有很高的知名度。

谷村生前与中国有着深厚情缘。他最早在1981年作为日本青少年文化交流团的一员到访中国,此后一直积极参与两国文化交流活动。后来他还曾受聘担任上海音乐学院客座教授,并在那里开设音乐工作室。

2010年上海世博会,谷村新司出任世博会日本推广形象大使,在开幕式上演唱了自己的成名作《星》,为现场及全世界观众带来了无限感动。
0507名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 13fc-AzOG)垢版2023/10/17(火) 20:04:06.90ID:bUrTY9De0
テスト
0508名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 13fc-AzOG)垢版2023/10/17(火) 20:07:40.06ID:bUrTY9De0
テスト
>>0507
0509名無しさん@お腹いっぱい。 (ワッチョイ 13fc-AzOG)垢版2023/10/17(火) 20:09:49.26ID:bUrTY9De0
>>508
テスト
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