APC Australia

Windows 11: Everything you need to know

Microsoft’s next OS has a slew of new features.

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It’s official: Microsoft has announced that the next version of Windows will be called Windows 11 and will be released as a free upgrade (and on new PCs) by Christmas 2021. Over the next few weeks and months, Windows Insiders will get to try out all the new features and we’ll all learn more about what’s in store. Here’s everything you need to know about Windows 11 right now.

Insiders have it now, main release later in 2021

If you’re signed up as a WIndows Insider, you should be able to try an official early version of Windows 11 by the time you read this, according to Microsoft. Microsoft says that anyone in the Dev or Beta channels will be eligible to get the Windows 11 Insider builds, provided that their hardware meets the requiremen­ts.

To sign up or change your channel in Windows Insider, go to Settings->Update and Security>Windows Insider Program. Microsoft also says that the official upgrade will be rolling out by the “holiday season.” So expect it any time between October and December.

Free upgrade, list of requiremen­ts

Like Windows 10 before it, Windows 11 will be a free upgrade for anyone who has a recent prior version of Windows and the right hardware. According to Microsoft’s blog, the minimum system requiremen­ts are:

• CPU: 1 GHz or faster with two or more cores on a 64-bit processor

• 4GB of RAM

• 64GB of storage

• UEFI BIOS with Secure Boot

• TPM 2.0

• 9-inch or larger screen with 720p resolution

• Internet connectivi­ty and an MS account. No offline installs

• GPU compatible with DirectX 12 These exceed the Windows 10 system requiremen­ts in a number of ways. Microsoft lists those as 1-GHz CPU (but not dual core or 64-bit), just 1 or 2GB of RAM, a

mere 16 to 20GB of storage space and a GPU that is capable of DirectX 9 with a minimum resolution of 800 x 600.

The TPM 2.0 requiremen­t could shut out some users, particular­ly those with homebuilt PCs. Not every motherboar­d comes with a TPM module on-board, though some motherboar­ds are upgradeabl­e with a TPM module you can buy after the fact. Many systems have TPM on board but it comes disabled so you’ll need to turn it on your BIOS.

New Start Menu

The new Windows Start menu appears by default in the middle of the screen, though you can change a setting to make it appear on the left. Gone are the live tiles, replaced with simple, colourful icons.

According to Microsoft, the menu uses “the cloud” to help you as it shows recommende­d apps / documents, no matter what device you were working on previously. As an example, Microsoft Partner Director of Windows User Experience Carmen Zlateff showed how a document she was looking at on her phone appeared in the Start menu on her PC. Windows 11 also has a new Search experience, which now appears in a separate window (no more text search bar). It’s supposed to also search across devices and services, as well as using Bing search for the web.

Snap Layouts and Snap Groups

On Windows 11, hovering over the minimise / maximise button gives you a choice of different snap layouts, based on your screen size. So, for example, if you have three apps open and enough room, you’ll be offered the option to split evenly between all three or have one take up half the screen and the other two take up a quarter each.

If you have to interrupt your workflow by, for example, responding to an incoming email, you’ll be able to restore your snapped layout by clicking on an icon on the taskbar. Icons for these “snap groups” will appear next to app icons so you can easily switch back to a complete layout in one click.

Docking and undocking: Windows 11 remembers

If you have a tablet or laptop that you dock to an external monitor and then undock, Windows 11 will automatica­lly minimise the windows that were on the external monitor(s) when you disconnect from them and then automatica­lly restore them to the monitor when you reconnect.

This is a huge win for anyone who has to take their laptop into a conference room for a meeting and then back to their desk after it’s over.

Virtual Desktops now allow custom wallpaper

The virtual desktop experience has been improved so now each desktop can have its own wallpaper and distinct look. Zlateff said this is a good way to separate work from home and gaming experience­s.

Teams integrated with Windows

The Teams icon will be on the taskbar and you’ll be able to use it to make calls to anyone else who uses Teams on any device, including Android and iOS devices. You’ll also be able to send and receive SMS messages from the taskbar.

The news feed adapts to you, trying to bring in feeds that you want, based on your preference­s. There’s also a feature that lets you give some content creators a tip.

Windows Widgets

A slide-out pane on the left side of the screen shows you “Windows widgets” a set of curated news, weather and stock informatio­n. This is a clear evolution of the weather and news bar we see in recent versions of Windows 10.

New touch experience

Say goodbye to “tablet mode.” When you go into tablet mode on a 2-in-1, you’ll see slightly more space between icons and larger touch targets, but the interface will remain largely the same. You’ll be able to use the same gestures – three finger swipe for

example – that you use on a Windows Precision touchpad as well.

The pen experience has been updated to allow haptic feedback as you write. The touch keyboard is all-new and will let you customise its look and feel while also using emojis. Voice typing has also been improved and automatica­lly adds punctuatio­n while taking voice commands such as “delete that” to help you edit.

Auto HDR for gaming

If your monitor supports HDR but your game doesn’t, Windows 11 will convert the colour and lighting. During a demo, Microsoft’s Sarah Bond showed how this feature made Skyrim look much more colourful and lifelike. This feature originated on the Xbox and is now coming to the PC.

DirectStor­age helps load times

Another Xbox feature now bound for Windows, DirectStor­age allows your game to load content directly from your NVMe SSD into your GPU’s memory, without using a lot of CPU resources. This means faster level load times and less time spent waiting.

Xbox Game Pass built in

Xbox Game Pass will come built into Windows 11 so, if you purchase a membership, you’ll have access to hundreds of titles. Xbox Cloud Gaming will also be available so you can even play on systems that have lesser hardware.

New Microsoft Store policies

The store will support all kinds of apps, including those programmin­g as PWA, UWP or Win32 formats. If you use your own commerce engine, you will not have to pay any revenue share to Microsoft at all. However, if you use Microsoft’s engine, you’ll have an 85/15 split for regular apps or 88/12 for games.

Android apps coming to Windows 11

You will be able to launch Android apps directly within Windows and find them in the Microsoft store via Amazon’s own app store. Windows will use Intel’s Bridge Technology, a run-time post compiler, to allow the Android apps to run natively and be treated like any other Windows app that you can snap, pin-to-start, etc. Panay demonstrat­ed this feature by running TikTok.

Yes, this technology will work on both AMD and Intel CPUs. Intel writes that “Intel Bridge Technology is a runtime postcompil­er that enables applicatio­ns to run natively on x86-based devices, including running those applicatio­ns on Windows.” More importantl­y, on a later broadcast, Microsoft Head of Developer Platform Kevin Gallo confirmed that this “Android subsystem for Linux” would run on both brands of processor.

Windows 11 ready PCs

Get ready for the marketing blitz. Microsoft says that “Windows 11 ready” PCs are coming. Considerin­g that the hardware requiremen­ts are so low that pretty much any new PC can meet them, this sounds like more marketing hype than useful informatio­n.

We have already received updates from Acer and Dell saying that either all of or the vast majority of their recent offerings are Windows 11 compatible. Suffice it to say that if your PC has less than 4GB of RAM and a sub-1-GHz processor, Windows 10 probably isn’t working very well for you either. However, we don’t know if all of these computers came with TPM 2.0 modules on their motherboar­ds.

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 ??  ?? Windows 11 is ready to go right now, as long as you have an Insider account and meet the minimum machine specs.
Windows 11 is ready to go right now, as long as you have an Insider account and meet the minimum machine specs.
 ??  ?? Windows Snap gets a major overhaul, bringing good useability improvemen­ts.
Windows Snap gets a major overhaul, bringing good useability improvemen­ts.
 ??  ?? Windows 11 sees serious Teams integratio­n, which is welcome now, and would have been handy a couple of years ago.
Windows 11 sees serious Teams integratio­n, which is welcome now, and would have been handy a couple of years ago.
 ??  ?? TOP LEFT: Widgets are back, and while potentiall­y cool it open up new ways for Microsoft and partners to force feed us marketing. TOP RIGHT:
Unsurprisi­ngly, Windows Store has seen a major revamp. ABOVE LEFT:
Windows Store also gets a new layout. ABOVE RIGHT:
Android integratio­n too!
TOP LEFT: Widgets are back, and while potentiall­y cool it open up new ways for Microsoft and partners to force feed us marketing. TOP RIGHT: Unsurprisi­ngly, Windows Store has seen a major revamp. ABOVE LEFT: Windows Store also gets a new layout. ABOVE RIGHT: Android integratio­n too!
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