At its introduction event, Microsoft chief product officer Panos Panay expressed a desire not to alienate longtime Windows aficionados, and that’s a good thing (though almost impossible, given the way many people react to change). Despite that goal of keeping it familiar, there’s plenty of innovation in Windows 11.
So, what’s new in 11, and is it worth upgrading? Here is the rundown of all the new features from PC Mag:
A New Look
The Taskbar icons are now centered and smaller like in Chrome OS, but the Start button is still to the left of the other app icons. Windows get tightly rounded corners, similar to macOS. The centered look could win you over, since it doesn’t require you to move the mouse cursor across a full screen to launch an app from the Start Menu.
More subtle are the transparency, animations, and clean icon design that represent an evolution of the Fluent Design System, which, though promised, never fully took over in Windows 10. A couple of new materials join the translucent one called Acrylic: the opaque Mica, which is slightly tinted based on the background color; and Smoke, which darkens other areas to make you focus on an important input region. Dark mode, too, looks more consistent, and these materials change to reflect that mode.
Widgets are Making a Comeback
Widgets are making a comeback! Apple bolstered widgets in iOS 14 and iPadOS 15, and Microsoft dabbled in bringing back desktop widgets with the News and Interests panel in Windows 10. But Windows 11 widgets further the idea. The new widgets deliver a personalized feed of news, weather, traffic, sports, and stock market data, powered by AI for customization and Edge for rendering. Later updates will let you expand the Widgets panel to fill the whole screen, and third-party content providers will be able to take advantage of this new feature.
Snap Layouts
Windows has long been unmatched in its ability to position, size, open, and close windows on the screen to your taste. Apple’s macOS only recently added the ability to set windows to take up exactly half the screen, something Windows users have had for years.
Now comes the latest windowing convenience: Snap Layouts. Snap Layouts let you choose from a selection of window layouts, easily populating them with app windows of your choice. Maybe even more important than the extra layout choices is that these layouts are saved and accessible from the app taskbar icons so you don’t have to re-create them after doing something else on the PC.
Teams is Integral
One of Microsoft’s biggest hits over the last few years is Teams, the videoconferencing and messaging tool. Microsoft Teams went from having 20 million users in 2019 to more than 250 million active monthly users by the end of 2021. The company wants it to reach beyond the workplace, though, and a new taskbar button gives easy access to Teams in Windows 11.
Teams is cross-platform, running on Android, iOS, and macOS as well as Windows. It also works with SMS for those who don’t have the mobile app installed, meaning you can text message anyone’s phone number from your PC for free, an appreciated perk. The feature has two parts: Teams Chat and Teams videoconferencing, which opens a separate window. When you start a message to someone who doesn’t have an account, they get an invitation to sign up for the free service.
Updated Default Apps
Many of the old Windows standbys—Paint, Photos, Notepad, Media Player, Mail, and so on—have or will be updated for the new look and in some cases get new features. A great case in point is the humble Clock app, which Windows 11 endows with a super productivity feature: Focus Sessions. With Focus Sessions, you set boundaries for when you want undistracted time for getting stuff done.
The Photos app in Windows 11 is a sleeper in that it’s remarkably capable not only for organizing and editing photos, but also for video editing with titles, transitions, effects, and more. The Photos app includes face recognition, auto-generated albums, and integrated maps for photos with location data—features that even some paid photo applications lack. New for Photos is an edge-to-edge photo view, multi-image view, and an improved cropping interface, along with the Fluent Design updates.
The new Media Player app handles both music and video, and replaces Windows 10’s Groove app. Like that, the new player can handle FLAC audio and 4K video.
A Redesigned Settings App
The redesigned Settings app now features a persistent left menu. It saves you from having to back out of nested settings to quickly get to another group. Otherwise, you get most everything found in Windows 10’s Settings.
Multiple Desktops
Now in Windows 11 you can set a different background color or image for each virtual desktop you have, which makes a lot of sense if you have one desktop for work and another for personal use, for example. Note that you can only set the backgrounds to be pictures or solid colors. If you want a slideshow background or Theme, then that background will apply to all desktops. The Snap Layouts mentioned above can also be used separately on each desktop. For more, read How to Manage Virtual Desktops in Windows 11.
Tablet Mode and Docking
With Windows 11, when you dock or plug your laptop into a monitor, it remembers the last app layout you were using. Microsoft no longer uses the term Tablet mode in Windows 11, because using the OS on a device like the Surface is more similar to the desktop mode than in Windows 10. When you detach a tablet’s keyboard or flip its screen back for touch interaction, subtle changes appear, such as more space between taskbar icons. New three-finger swipe actions let you call up Task View and minimize or recall running apps. The new Surface Slim Pen 2 provides haptic and audio feedback, and voice typing keeps getting better.
New Sounds
The soundscape of Windows starting up, warning, notifications, and more have become gentler, more soothing, and shorter in Windows 11. Reviewers state that the new sounds make for more enjoyable computing sessions.
More Gaming Options
You can run Xbox Game Pass games on Windows 11, and Xbox Cloud Gaming is supported in the Xbox app on Windows 11. That means every PC is now an Xbox as well as a PC, according to apps and gaming analyst Jordan Minor. In terms of performance and visual quality, the update also adds DirectStorage and Auto HDR. The former speeds uploading times for games from storage to the graphics card. The latter produces a far richer image quality with more color range and depth. In terms of comparative raw game performance between Windows 10 and Windows 11, PC Mag hardware analysts found little difference between the two OS versions.
A Better App Store
Yes, you can run Android apps on your PC—but only through the Amazon AppStore or by sideloading them. For now, the capability is in Preview and it offers a limited selection, favoring kids’ games. What remains to be seen is how well Android apps will run on the desktop. Note that the Phone Link app offers another way to run apps on the PC—you can use any apps installed on your compatible Android phone.
Other significant updates to the store are that developers can now include progressive web apps and old-school Win32 apps, as well as the UWP (Universal Windows Platform) apps normally found in the store. Even better for developers, they can bypass any fee cuts from Microsoft by using their own commerce engines. Using Microsoft’s commerce entails a still-market-low 15% cut.
Performance and Security
PCMag’s hardware team also ran comparative performance testing of Windows 10 and Windows 11 for productivity applications and found that, as with gaming, there was little difference, with 11 performing better than 10 in more areas. Speed improvements have also come to web browsing in Edge, signing in with Windows Hello, and waking from sleep. Windows updates are 40% smaller and more efficient, and they occur in the background. More efficient energy use means longer battery life.
Windows head Panos Panay has predicted that Windows 11 would be the most secure version yet. One sign of increased security is that the new OS requires PCs to have a Trusted Platform Module 2.0 (TPM) security chip and Secure Boot capability. Our security expert Neil Rubenking contends that Windows 11 includes some good security-hardening features, though users unfortunately can override them to make the OS less secure.
To Upgrade or Not to Upgrade
There are certainly a lot of reasons to take the plunge into the Windows 11 waters. But before doing so, you should first determine whether your PC can run Windows 11. The rollout will last through mid-2022, according to Microsoft, as the myriad PC hardware and software configurations are validated for compatibility.
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