The OS's memory manager has been updated too. Microsoft Edge has been upgraded to include many new Web technologies, which should enable peer-to-peer networking for websites and very high-performance numerical math in JavaScript. It should be better behind the scenes, too. In the foreground, users will likely notice a handful of changes in the interface. This is essentially the most recent build, although it apparently is installed without the big in-place upgrade process (although I have yet to do it myself, as stated above). The update itself shouldn't be too surprising if you have been following our periodic check-up with the Windows Insider program. It might remove the ability to go back in case of problems though, so be careful. It was designed to bring Windows 7 and Windows 8.x to Windows 10, but it (apparently) can also be used on older versions of Windows 10 to update them to newer, public versions. Those who want to receive it before Windows Update graces you with its existence will apparently need to either download the ISOs, or use the Windows 10 update tool. I've been doing that all day and still haven't got it. The update is apparently being rolled out to users slowly, and manually pressing “Check for updates” will not fix it either. Microsoft has published the November 2015 Update for Windows 10, which brings it to the logical version number: 1511.
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