Maximum PC

Major Features from the Latest Windows Update

- BY IAN EVENDEN

The Windows 10 October 2018 Update—because Microsoft loves simple names—is due soon, and may already be downloadin­g by the time you read this. It’s the sixth major release for Windows 10 since it first hit in July 2015, and it arrives through Windows Update. It’s not necessaril­y a bad thing—although it might be nice if Microsoft let us just get on with using our PCs—but this release seems a bit light on actual new features. We spent some time with the Insider Preview to see what’s actually new.

1 Start Menu and Searching

You can now name tile folders on the Start menu, and hide the scrollbars using an option in Ease of Access, but the biggest change is in searching. It’s got a wider interface, and if you search for an app that’s not installed, you get an install link under the “Apps” header. Bing searches also launch straight out of the Start menu in Edge, but the promised nagging to get you to change from Chrome or Firefox to Edge seems to have been forgotten about.

2 Cosmetic Changes

Lovers of the dark side can find a choice of “default app modes” in “Settings > Personaliz­ation > Colors.” There’s only “Light” and “Dark,” so it’s not a huge decision, but the difference between them is enormous. Elsewhere, Action Center has new animations, and users of the Snipping Tool (mainly people who make lists for magazines) should note it’s being phased out in favor of a “Screen Snip” option on the Action Center and a Snip and Sketch app. Hopefully, this’ll fix Snipping Tool’s problem with catching itself in its own screenshot­s.

3 Clipboard

Copying and pasting isn’t exactly the most exciting feature, but it’s good to see such an old Windows stalwart getting a makeover. In addition to the old Ctrl-V to paste, there’s now a Windows-V option that needs to be activated the first time you use it. After this, everything you Ctrl-C is remembered, not just the last thing, and you can choose what to paste from a list when you press Windows-V. There’s also an option to clear the list. It gets better, because if you’re logged into Windows 10 using the same account on multiple devices, this clipboard history is shared through the magic of the Internet. As long as it’s just snippets of text, that is—there’s no ability to sync copied pictures as yet. There are, of course, various settings to control this behavior in the new “Clipboard” section of Settings.

A future goal is the addition of Cloud Clipboard synching to the Swiftkey keyboard for mobile devices, purchased by Microsoft in 2016, which would make a lot of sense. The keyboard has come to Windows, too— the on-screen keyboard is “powered” by Swiftkey.

4 Phone Connectivi­ty

There’s a “Your Phone” shortcut prominentl­y placed

at the top-left of a desktop that’s clear of other icons apart from the Recycle Bin. Double-clicking this opens a window that asks for your cell phone number, and sends you a link to an app on Google Play (so it’s Android-only for now; an iOS version is coming) for Your Phone Companion. This is a rebrand of the old Microsoft Apps, and still contains links to download mobile versions of Outlook, Solitaire Collection, and Edge, but it now links to the Your Phone app on Windows, as long as you’re signed into the same Microsoft account on both.

Once they’re linked—you need to give permission— Your Phone can view the photos (if you give permission) and read the SMS messages (again, permission needed), and it must read your contacts, too, as the correct names appear next to the messages. The photos are described as “recent”—for us, it displayed only the past three days’ worth—and while there’s no explicit “Save” option (a double-click opens them in the app of your choice), you can drag them from Your Phone on to the desktop. Text can be copied from SMS messages, and you can write new messages, too, with contacts auto-completing in the “To” field. SMS may be oldfashion­ed in these days of Skype and WhatsApp, but it’s clever, nonetheles­s.

5 Game Bar

Windows 10 taught us that anything can be a game as far as the Game Bar is concerned, so you can capture video of any app, and the updated version is no different. It no longer asks you up front if the app you want to capture is a game, and we’re quite pleased about that, as it was just a little silly. It’s not really a bar any longer, more of a column, and it enables you to capture screenshot­s and video from inside any app.

6 Windows HD Color

If you’ve got a fancy new HDR monitor, there is now a section in Settings dedicated to the display of High Dynamic Range and Wide Color Gamut content. It’s rather limited, though, telling you whether your screen is capable of displaying the content to its fullest, and linking to video playback settings.

7 Other Changes to Settings

Bluetooth devices now display their battery levels in Settings, and there’s a new section in Typing, called Typing Insights, that claims Windows is using AI to help us type. Windows has clearly never seen our unedited typing, otherwise it wouldn’t offer, but by clicking “Typing Insights,” you get a rundown of how many times the AI has corrected your typos and auto-completed words, assuming you have autocorrec­t turned on.

There’s also some under-the-hood stuff, such as safely removing external GPUs connected by Thunderbol­t 3, a new column in Task Manager that shows how much energy various processes are using, and Photos can now rotate images taken in HEIF format (this will mainly be of interest to those sporting top-end iPhones). Pen users will now find handwritin­g recognitio­n is the default input method, too.

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