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Windows 10: Insider Build 17035 gives the first peeks at the next major Redstone 4 update

The first big update to the Windows 10 Redstone 4 update cycle.

- BY MARK HACHMAN

Microsoft’s latest Windows 10 Insider build for the “Redstone 4” update cycle tries to do away with the “sneakernet” with a feature called Near Share, as well as a phone-like autosugges­t feature for text typing. Microsoft recently launched Windows 10 Insider build 17035 for the Fast Ring, one of the first code releases for what’s been referred to as “Redstone 4,” or the update cycle following the Fall Creators Update. If Microsoft holds to its current schedule, Redstone 4 should be due in the spring.

Until then, however, Windows Insiders are part of the testing team trying out new features: Near Share, better tab muting in

Edge, a new Audio settings menu, the ability to configure update bandwidth, and a few more.

Why this matters: Microsoft’s free updates to Windows 10 continue. Now, however, we’re beginning a new, blank slate. Will there be a theme to Redstone 4? What will be the key apps? These are early days, and we’re still getting a few scattered, though useful, utilities.

HOW TO USE NEAR SHARE

It’s pretty easy to just haul out a USB key and copy a file over—if you have one handy. Near Share replaces that with Bluetooth, however. Within Windows 10, you can share just about any file to email, Facebook, and more. Now your PC can seek out nearby PCS and offer to share a file, too.

You’ll need to have the current Insider build 17035 (or, as new builds are launched, something more recent). You’ll need to turn Bluetooth on, then make sure that the Near Share button in the Action Center is toggled on. After that, every time you see the Share icon, you’ll have the option to share the file or URL with a nearby device. The recipient will get a note in the Action Center to either accept it or decline.

(Note: most people don’t “name” their PCS, and instead use the generic PC name Windows assigns. You’ll need to check with the recipient to confirm the name of their PC.)

EDGE IMPROVEMEN­TS: BETTER TAB MUTING, EPUB SAVING

While the Fall Creators Update added nifty features such as ebook annotation­s and PDF improvemen­ts, this new update cycle allows you to save free EPUB books that you’re reading online to your local hard

drive. Because, well, they’re free. Likewise, if you click a book in the Book pane, you can pin it to the Start menu or just remove it from the device.

A more useful addition is the ability to mute tabs right from the tab itself. Typically, web browsers (including Edge) will show a small speaker icon next to a tab that’s playing audio. Muting that tab, though, often requires right-clicking it and selecting a mute option. While that option is still there, the speaker icon is now a toggle, so that a tab can be muted just by clicking the icon.

LIMIT UPDATE BANDWIDTH, AUTOSUGGES­T

While the Fall Creators Update allowed you to adjust the bandwidth used by Windows updates, the new build extends that same functional­ity to “foreground updates”— basically downloads you kick off, like apps you download from the Store. That’s handy, if only because people rarely babysit a major app download (such as a game like Gears of War 4), instead focusing on other things, like web browsing.

The new Windows 10 Insider Build 17035 also migrates the main Audio settings (with the ability to set Windows sounds, and so forth) into the Settings menu, and out of the Control Panel.

Windows’ touch keyboard includes a couple of improvemen­ts, with an “Acrylic”themed look to the keyboard, as well as expanding the touch keyboard’s reach to more than 190 new foreign-language layouts.

While the Fall Creators Update added nifty features such as ebook annotation­s and PDF improvemen­ts, this new update cycle allows you to save free EPUB books that you’re reading online to your local hard drive.

Microsoft has also begun to add generally useful technologi­es, such as eye tracking and dictation, as assistive technologi­es for differentl­y abled people. To this list Microsoft has added an optional autosugges­t feature— not autocorrec­t, but autosugges­t. As you type, Microsoft will pop up suggestion­s for the next word. It’s a feature typically found on phones, that now is included in Windows.

The kicker, though, is that you don’t need to use the soft or touch keyboard to enable autosugges­t—it works with your standard hardware keyboard. To enable it, go to Settings > Devices > Typing and then toggle on the Show Text Suggestion­s As I Type On Hardware Keyboard setting.

If you do use pen to write using the soft keyboard, you’ll see an improved “space” gesture (a vertical line) for adding a space between words, and improved handwritin­g recognitio­n.

Finally, Japanese users will see something special: Text suggestion­s from the Japanesela­nguage AI chatbot Rinna, who will now suggest phrases as you type. Unfortunat­ely, given the Tay debacle in the United States ( go.pcworld. com/tayd), don’t look for the same feature to come to American users anytime soon.

 ??  ?? The Acrylic UI has now been added to the touch keyboard.
The Acrylic UI has now been added to the touch keyboard.
 ??  ?? With Edge, you can either toggle the tab into a mute state, or right-click it.
With Edge, you can either toggle the tab into a mute state, or right-click it.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Windows 10’s autosugges­t works with your standard hardware keyboard.
Windows 10’s autosugges­t works with your standard hardware keyboard.

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