The Press

Cool ways to foster your inner doodler

A new Windows 10 update coming this month is intended to help users become more creative, writes Edward C. Baig.

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Microsoft is trying to foster a creative streak within the Windows community with its free update that starts April 11 – even if your definition of being creative boils down to broadcasti­ng the games that you play.

‘‘Our vision is to empower the creator in all of us,’’ says Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft’s corporate vice president for the Windows and devices group, who refers to the Creators Update as a ‘‘pretty major release’’.

Many of the improvemen­ts and touches that the update brings, though it doesn’t feel as major as Microsoft suggests. And not all of those enhancemen­ts fall under the creative bucket. Here are eight key highlights:

Paint goes 3D

Microsoft’s Paint program dates back to the Reagan administra­tion. Paint now adds the ability to create and modify 3D objects. I’m challenged as an artist but I did noodle around with a 3D doodling tool.

And if you’re more artistic than I am, you can upload your creation to the Remix3D.com site from within the app, and hopefully draw inspiratio­n from others, or at least grab pre-made 3D objects for your own library. You can export your creations in either 2D or 3D formats. If you have access to a 3D printer, you’ll be able to print 3D objects as well.

Marking up photos and maps

Here’s another opportunit­y to flaunt your creative talents and have some fun via the Windows Ink tool inside the Photos app. You can draw on pictures and videos, as I did with the Surface pen. You can draw inside the Maps app, too.

Improving the browser

Mehdi says that more than half the time folks spend in Windows 10 are spent in a browser. The bad news for Microsoft, however, is that most often that browser is Google’s Chrome, rather than Microsoft’s own Edge.

As part of the Creators Update, Microsoft says the Edge browser is now faster, more secure and more generous with battery life – Microsoft claims you’ll be able to stream a video up to an hour and half longer with Edge versus Chrome. Such improvemen­ts are important, of course, but not easily noticed.

What you will see is the ability to preview visual thumbnails of your open tabs by hovering over a given tab. And you can also set aside all those open tabs to reference later, bringing them back by selecting a ‘‘restore tabs’’ button. This could be useful, say, if you need to return to a work project. Minor quibble: I wish you could name the set of tabs you’ve set aside to look at later.

Security

Through a new Windows Defender Security Centre, you can examine the overall security status of your system.

By clicking inside on a ‘‘health report’’ option, I could see get an overview of the most recent scan of my system. Microsoft reported no issues related to battery life, storage or the most recent Windows Updates, but there was a recommenda­tion to update a device driver. Unfortunat­ely, Windows didn’t do a good job of letting me know which driver needed updating.

Read an e-book

While you’re in the browser, you can read an e-book. For the first time, Microsoft has added an e-book store as part of the Windows Store. As with other readers, you can bookmark pages, summon a dictionary definition (through Cortana), and get other basic features. Microsoft isn’t sharing just how many books will be available in the Windows Store at launch.

Gaming

Microsoft is giving a lot of love to gamers. There’s now a dedicated games section in Windows settings. Microsoft has added a ‘‘game mode’’ (turned on by default) that is supposed to prioritise system resources when you’re playing a game, potentiall­y useful if you’ve got a lot of apps running at the same time.

Also new is the ability to broadcast a game using the Beam streaming platform that the Xbox team acquired in August. You can start to stream a game by summoning a Game bar by simultaneo­usly pressing the Windows and G keys on your keyboard. This Game bar also has shortcut buttons for taking a screenshot, recording your activity or landing on your Xbox page.

Microsoft is also unifying things so that if you buy a game on the Xbox console or through a Windows PC, you can play it on either system.

Adjust a night light

Computer displays emit blue light, which can keep you awake at night.

A new night light feature lets you alter the colour temperatur­e range on your PC to display warmer colours that are supposed to help you sleep. You can schedule the hours when the night light feature kicks in.

Speaking of bedtime, a parental control feature available on Windows PCs that lets you limit junior’s screen time playing games, is now through the Creators Update available for Xbox One.

Supporting mixed reality

Put this more in the coming soon category, but the Creators Update will support the first Windows Mixed Reality-enabled headsets when they arrive later this year from Acer, ASUS, Dell, HP and Lenovo, at a starting price of US$299.

According to Mehdi, the headsets will contain built-in sensors to enable inside-out, six degrees of freedom, allowing you to walk around without the need for external markers or sensors in the wall.

It’s not entirely clear whether these will be some scaled-down consumer-y versions of HoloLens or something else, but suffice to say I’ll be eager to give them a try. – TNS

 ?? REUTERS ?? Many of the improvemen­ts and touches that the update brings do not feel as major as Microsoft suggests.
REUTERS Many of the improvemen­ts and touches that the update brings do not feel as major as Microsoft suggests.

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