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Windows 11 Screenshots Leak, Show New Start Menu and More (theverge.com) 302

Screenshots of Microsoft's upcoming Windows 11 operating system have appeared online today. Originally published at Chinese site Baidu, the screenshots show off the new Windows 11 user interface and Start menu. The UI changes look very similar to what was originally found in Windows 10X before Microsoft canceled that project in favor of Windows 11. From a report: App icons are now centered on the taskbar, with a new Start button and menu. The Start menu is a simplified version of what currently exists in Windows 10, without Live Tiles. It includes pinned apps and the ability to quickly shut down or restart Windows 11 devices. The operating system is identified as Windows 11 Pro in screenshots, and we can confirm they are genuine. Microsoft has been dropping hints that it's ready to launch Windows 11. The software giant is holding a special Windows event to reveal its next OS on June 24th. The event starts at 11AM ET, and the event invite includes a window that creates a shadow with an outline that looks like the number 11. An ISO of Windows 11 has also leaked, according to multiple reports.
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Windows 11 Screenshots Leak, Show New Start Menu and More

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  • 11? (Score:5, Informative)

    by Calydor ( 739835 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:05PM (#61489996)

    I've been somewhat out of the loop on this, but wasn't the point of Windows 10's model that it would be the last one, forever to be updated but with no new increments in base versions?

    • Re:11? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:10PM (#61490018)

      I assume they realized if they keep the moniker at Windows 10 and just upgrade it it would be much harder to extract upgrade fees.

      With the switch to 11 they can act like it's all new and charge folks for the update from 10.

      Whether there is enough good stuff in there to justify that remains to be seen but frankly I doubt it based on what we've been hearing. Seems more like a decent service pack than a full update worth of a new "version" and the outlay of money.

      Maybe we will be surprised and the change from 10 to 11 will be free of cost in which case it's really semantics.

      • Re: 11? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:20PM (#61490076)
        They will not charge for this update. They just moved the version number to 11 because Mac OS did just that, when it stopped using 10.xx and moved on to 11. Monkey see, monkey do. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
        • Agreed. This is simply adopting a similar versioning model as Apple and Google; as in "Version X, now with extra grits!"

        • Re: 11? (Score:5, Funny)

          by Myrdos ( 5031049 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:58PM (#61490302)

          Windows 10. Microsoft said it would last forever, that it would always be there for me. We had plans together, a never-ending summer of updates, and endless backwards compatibility laid out for us. All lies. Empty, meaningless words that cannot fill the void in my hard drive. All along, you were secretly carrying the End Of Life for these golden, carefree days. When will the first software come out that says "Windows 11 required?". When will I have to update my hardware to enjoy the latest version of Windows? WHEN!?

          My Windows 10 Compatible stickers have become as meaningless as my Messenger username. Worthless bits of data waiting for a day that will never come.

          • Re: 11? (Score:4, Interesting)

            by thereddaikon ( 5795246 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @03:02PM (#61490568)

            Not to be the killjoy to an obvious joke post but this is the internet so,

            They had already been killing off hardware support for various things with their incremental model already. There is definitely hardware that working in early releases of Windows 10 that is no longer supported.

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          Looks like the made the start-bar look a lot more like the MacOS Dock while they were at it.

        • Then what is the point?

          Windows is expensive and complex and a nightmare to support and develop and it makes no economic sense to develop unless customers want a Windows 365 (for corporations) to do minor updates and driver fixes for newer hardware.

          The days of hanging out at CompUSA at midnight for Windows95 are long gone as an OS is bundled with something like a cell phone plan these days. I see no reason to continue Windows except to run older desktop and enterprise software.

          Giving out for free costs money

      • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

        It's a free upgrade. Would you like to try again?

        • Assume much?

          We don't even have an official announcement that the product exists, and you're already making claims about what the upgrade price will be?

        • "Upgrade", ha ha ha.

          Yes, "centered task bar icons", how did we live without them before??

          All this innovation is making me dizzy!

      • Re:11? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gmack ( 197796 ) <gmack@noSpAM.innerfire.net> on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @02:02PM (#61490328) Homepage Journal

        The real issue is the constant rolling updates makes compatibility checking and documentation a nightmare. You can't just say "compatible with Windows 10" anymore, you need to specify a range of releases. And the same goes for documentation. It has become a nightmare for searching for how to do things online since much of the Windows 10 documentation isn't for the latest version and often doesn't apply anymore.

        They can ignore end users, but I can only imagine the corporate clients have been getting more pissed as time goes on

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Quarters ( 18322 )

          Microsoft releases two Windows 10 updates a year. How is maintaining documentation for that any more onerous than for any version of MacOS or the various releases of Linux distros?

          • Re:11? (Score:4, Insightful)

            by at0mjack ( 953726 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @05:27PM (#61491034)
            It's more onerous because there's no simple way to refer to *which* version of Windows 10 you are talking about. For Debian, you can say "In Buster you did XXXX, but in Stretch you need to do YYYY". In MacOS you can say "If you're running Big Sur, then XXXX, but in Catalina it's YYYY". The vast majority of people running Linux or MacOS have at least some idea which version they are running. Off the top of your head, do you know which version of Windows 10 you are running? If an article about Windows was posed 6 months ago, was it about the version that you were running or a different version? No way to tell: they are all called Windows 10.
            • Windows 10 versions 1507 through 2004 are YYMM, very much like Ubuntu version numbers. Both are on semi-annual tracks if you're not on the long-term support branch of either. Since October 2020, however, Microsoft has replaced the last two digits 03/04 and 09/10 with H1 and H2 for first or second half.

    • I've been somewhat out of the loop on this, but wasn't the point of Windows 10's model that it would be the last one, forever to be updated but with no new increments in base versions?

      You must be very out of the loop. Basically everyone in the Windows department who was involved with that strategy has left MS. ... THREE TIMES OVER. No seriously, senior leadership has changed in the Windows division 3 times the Windows 10 is the last windows strategy was announced in 2015. The most recent change was only a year ago.

      • I've been somewhat out of the loop on this, but wasn't the point of Windows 10's model that it would be the last one, forever to be updated but with no new increments in base versions?

        You must be very out of the loop. Basically everyone in the Windows department who was involved with that strategy has left MS. ... THREE TIMES OVER. No seriously, senior leadership has changed in the Windows division 3 times the Windows 10 is the last windows strategy was announced in 2015. The most recent change was only a year ago.

        But when management[-3] says 'forever', the meaning of forever doesn't change with the arrival of management[-2, -1 and 0]. If I hear a vendor say 'forever' I expect them to mean it.

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      I mean, that's what they said, and it was true for awhile, and then it won't be true anymore.

      I believe that's about the same for literally anybody anywhere saying "never" .. it mostly just means "for now" until it no longer does. Change is inevitable. You'd think the one of the first things people come to learn about the world is that the word "never" is very much an approximation or relative term unless you're talking in rigorous math or science terms.

    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      I understand that Nigel Tufnel will be first in line to get this version.

  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:05PM (#61489998)
    How else can it be one louder?
    • by LordHighExecutioner ( 4245243 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:11PM (#61490022)
      Aren't 64 bits enough for everyone ?
      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        I think so. I remember the transition from 16 to 32 and thinking what a welcome upgrade it was. I also remember thinking that this would be more than adequate for the foreseeable future. I still think that.

        The move from 32 to 64, while more painful, wasn't nearly as liberating. I guess it's great that they're now affordable for those who can actually benefit from them, but they're still squarely in the 'nice to have' category. It's overkill for the average user, and I can't see that changing in my or

  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:07PM (#61490008) Journal

    Looking at the two pictures (wow! Two whole pictures), it would have been nice if the people paid to write these stories would stop being so chinsy with words and told us what we're looking at. Are we suddenly rationing words? Was the writer running out of space on the page?

    I'm presuming the first picture is of something which is supposed to be a Start menu. It's difficult to tell considering a) there's no description of what it is and b) everything is so light and pale it's difficult to make out what you're looking at.

    It would be nice if people stopped hiding things. This is almost as bad as Microsoft itself burying configuration items several layers deep in obscure places which have no relation to what you were looking for.

  • by Draconis183 ( 1871664 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:09PM (#61490012)

    Here comes the subscription model...

  • Color me unimpressed because I see the same loathed "PC settings", so I presume it has the same broken "Windows Updates" infrastructure/service and most of the things which have been horribly broken ever since Windows Vista (specially if you reboot/reset your PC in the middle of performing them which oftentimes happens to people because the "progress" "indicator" freezes). Windows XP updates were a lot more reliable and didn't decimate disk space.

    I also presume they haven't addressed horrible font antiali

  • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:14PM (#61490040) Homepage

    I realize it's a lot to hope for, what from MS TODAY ( in the modern age, UIX is a fucking joke, not just from MS but from near everyone ), but I sincerely hope we get UIX improvements and not just changes.

    Reduce actions necessary to fulfill the basic job function of being the interface between me and my software. Fewer clicks, less mouse dragging.

    • It's tough to beat the functionality that a 1970's-style UI of command-line and scripting language offers. Even if it was as ugly as a wide-collared shirt.

      • Well that's certainly true. In the late 90s the rage was upgrading business software from the old keyboard interface to the new fangled windows interface.

        As the tech doing the "upgrades", people hated me. They went from being able to do 10 things in seconds to 1 thing every couple of minutes because of the paradigm change ( and, not to put to fine a point on it, the horribleness of the windows 3.11 interface ). I honestly don't think we've ever approached that level of UIX efficiency since then.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by OrangeTide ( 124937 )

          The learning curve of GUI is (usually) shallower. Easier to train people on new software if the software uses the same consistent elements and similar workflows. In the command-line world every app had it's own magic inscrutable language. I think it's not that the mouse and a framebuffer are magic, but that the office desktop remains a strong metaphor in the design of a graphical interface and can be applied more consistently than CLIs of the past.

          There are pros and cons to CLI and GUI. But GUI really loses

      • CLI and GUI have different Pros/Cons. Usually the strength of the one is the weakness of the other and vice versa. I sure as hell wouldn't want to try to create a SVG or do image touchup via a command line when a mouse or digital pen + tablet makes it trivial.

        i.e. Good luck playing an RTS game from the command line!

        CLI
        + Can script it
        + Trivial to repeat it
        + Can be fast to type / execute
        + Can chain commands
        - Hard to learn
        - Have to lookup or memorize commands
        - Inconsistent syntax, parameters between programs
        -

      • I've always found assembly to be the most functional of all even if quite obtuse.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        You do realize that the command line is just as artificial as a GUI, yes? It is fed to you by OS engineers who though this is what you needed.

        Apple had it right with their MPW build framework. You could fire up Commando after hiliting a text command, or choose from lists. Up popped a modal dialog box that let you specify the 800 command line arguments and values by clicking radio buttons, check boxes, maybe the odd text tidbit. As you did this, it built the command you were going to execute in an editable w

    • Sort of, but honestly change for change's sake is not a good thing. There's a lot of UI paradigms that are fairly well established and work well. Throwing that out just because some anxious UI designer thinks they're a genius isn't a good thing.

      And whatever paradigm is adopted should be maintained from program to program. No, I don't want your uber-cool looking audio interface that looks like a 1980's cassette deck. Your portfolio of "cool and shiny" should not be getting in the way of the users work.

    • Well, right off the bat they've removed the "infinitely large" Windows corner button that can be reached with an un-aimed diagonal mouse movement in favor of a standard-sized icon that you have to aim for... so I'm not holding my breath for any actual improvements.

      Seriously, the special properties of screen edges and especially corners are basic UI design properties that have been well-understood since at least MacOS 1.0, why do UI designers keep sacrificing functionality for cosmetics? Windows 10 *finall

  • lol (Score:5, Insightful)

    by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:18PM (#61490064)

    So they're floating the icons in the center now? The whole point of anchoring the Start Menu in the left, starting in 95, was so that it's always in the same place and clicking on it is easy. If the bar expands and shrinks you'll have to find it each time.

    "But that takes half a second!" some of you may complain. Fortunately for us, UI designers are smart enough (well, the non-Microsoft, non-GNOME ones) to understand that those little annoyances add up and lead to an impression--even subconsciously--that the UI is somehow bad, unpleasant, or defective.

    • Re:lol (Score:4, Insightful)

      by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:36PM (#61490144) Homepage Journal

      the original Lisa and Macintosh put the application menu at the very top of the screen because it was easy to slam the mouse all the way to the top. Having menus inside of windows required extra precision to target. In some ways Microsoft's switch from the design elements of Windows 2.x and 3.x and to putting the start menu in the bottom corner on Windows 95 was along a similar line of thinking on usability.

      But marketing a user experience doesn't work if you can't constantly revise your user interface to show "innovations". No industry publications will spend time mentioning that your software's UI is exactly the same as it was in the last release, except perhaps in an negative light. I don't think UX is a game that anyone can win.

    • Screenshots on deskmodder.de, made of the same build, show the start button on the left. So the centered start button/icons just seems to be an option.

    • Re:lol (Score:5, Informative)

      by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:58PM (#61490308)

      Agreed 100%.

      Putting the start button in the center is idiotic. It is almost like the designers are clueless about Fitt's Law [wikipedia.org]

      The reason the start button is on the EDGE of a screen is that you can't over shoot it! More so when it is in the corner of the screen.

    • Marketing driving the UI = UX.
      Copying Apple's mistakes may improve Windoze but they could hire a real UI person to make improvements. Apple messed up when they prevented anchoring the dock left/right instead of center.

      When will somebody realize MENUS need to be fixed at the TOP of the screen for ALL apps?!
      Here we have all this fussing about wasted screen space today when we have massive screens and then waste space on menu bars on EACH WINDOW or even kill the menus (for larger toolbars) or act like we have

      • by Pentium100 ( 1240090 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @03:15PM (#61490606)

        When will somebody realize MENUS need to be fixed at the TOP of the screen for ALL apps?!

        This is one of the big reasons why I do not like Unity/GNOME.

        If the application window is neat the bottom right corner of the screen, I have to move the mouse all the way to the top left corner to access its menu. Then all the way back to the application window. No thank you.

  • by Known Nutter ( 988758 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:19PM (#61490066)
    Typical Windows -- installed on 2021/06/16 while the clock in the corner says 2021/06/15.
  • So it is all about slappin' new paint on the user interface, moving icons around, and maybe a couple of widgets to make something that obviously have been easier to begin with easier.

    Nothing improved about managing digital assets across systems and devices. Nothing new about access to the Linux or MacOS worlds. No interesting integration frameworks. No real functionality improvements just tweaks to old ones.

    And most of all nothing new about security. Windows remains the prime disease vector that is

  • by MobileTatsu-NJG ( 946591 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:27PM (#61490102)

    Until there's big announcement that Windows will not reboot without MY OKIE DOKIE I refuse to respond to MS announcements with anything but a fart noise.

    *ffrttprbprtrtrtzrrttzttzt*

    • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

      You can prevent windows from rebooting with a group policy, just update to Windows Pro.

      I would consider this a power user feature, because it's more important to me that "normal" users reboot their machines off hours when important updates are applied. If you're doing something that needs your machine to be on 24 hours a day, you're not a normal user (both by product definition and just by what "normal" means - the vast majority of Windows users don't need the machine plugging away on something 24 hours a d

      • If you're doing something that needs your machine to be on 24 hours a day, you're not a normal user...

        Based on what metric? The reason I'm salty about this is I was simply making a backup. Us little people do that from time to time.

        • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

          I assume you're already aware of "Active hours" and can't backup within a 12 hour window? These are hours you just tell windows not to reboot during.

          If not .. were you running the backup task from another computer? I might consider that a power user backup scenario. You're backing up a live machine. You can say your OS shouldn't reboot without you asking (and you can do your backups within active hours to ensure that) but if you're backing up from a drive that is hosting a live booted OS, you're making a wh

          • Again,*I* need to make the decisions about when the reboot happens, not Microsoft. I don't need to run around trying to work within an artificial limitation that they half-assedly created AND fight with you about. Ultimately I ended up switched to an OS that doesn't take that control away from me and there's no switching back until that's specifically addressed.

    • Well, that and it really should be setup so that far less stuff requires a reboot. For some things its unavoidable (eg, even for Linux you have to reboot for a kernel update), but for example installing a program should NEVER require rebooting the system.

    • If you have the Pro version of Windows 10, you can set a group policy to not automatically download updates. It is the Microsoft-approved method of doing what you want. Group Policies are not available on Home edition. Once you start downloading though, the automatic installation and reboot will happen. However, as long as you ignore the update notification box that pops up daily, you can easily go for 6+ months and only perform updates at your convenience.

  • by Myrv ( 305480 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:35PM (#61490138)

    App icons are now centered on the taskbar, with a new Start button and menu

    So basically they've copied the apple Dock. Guess old habits are hard to break.

    • All the users who have zero choice to go back to what they are accustomed to may as well switch to linux now... It is almost as if MS is blindly copying to stay relevant and do not realize why people are leaving them ASAP; well, they haven't adopted linux style drivers or open sourced direct X so they must still know why they are dominant.

      They are also reminding users that like Apple lock-in, MS is also a lock-in ecosystem.

      • All the users who have zero choice to go back to what they are accustomed to may as well switch to linux now...

        For those who have that new-fangled technology called virtualization, one can move forward, backward, and side-to-side. Freedom is what you make of it, rather than what one complains about.

        • I would dearly love to stick Windows in a VM, but I need hardware acceleration (AMD Radeon Pro GPU) and that's not trivial to set up.
          And no, this isn't for gaming, what few games I play run natively under Ubuntu. I can only imagine the difficulties of VMing Windows if you *do* game, much less avoiding the DRM thinking you are running some kind of hack.

    • Cairoshell [cairoshell.com] beat them to it.

    • They copied the apple dock, but the chromeOS app menu in it.

      Looks like butts. At least some gradation/dimensionality seems to be creeping back in.

  • App icons are now centered on the taskbar, ...

    Barf.

    The left side, out of the way of the active apps is fine, but to each their own. Hopefully this is configurable. I'd offer more commentary, but there's not much to go on here.

  • Is Microsoft trying to align their UX with Apple? As soon as I saw the two screenshots I immediately thought Mac OS

    • I thought the same thing.
      Once upon a time saying "it looks like a Mac" was a statement of praise, but after what Apple did to MacOS's UI in Big Slur, that statement can no longer be taken as a compliment.

      I don't think any OS, whether desktop or mobile, in 2021 has a good UI with a good UX.

    • by mccalli ( 323026 )
      It seriously looks like a Linux skin rip-off of the Mac. Massively so. This is seriously just macOS with worse typography and font rendering.

      There's a couple of things Windows UI does better than the Mac at the moment. Drag and drop to currently unseen targets is better (the Windows way of dragging to a task bar, then the list popping up for open windows, then you drag to that window and it opens up. Takes a long time to type but utterly intuitive to do), and I quite like the "right click->New here"
  • As long as the UI is configurable. I cannot stand UI that changes locations based on number of icons/programs running. As long as the start can go to the left corner (like always), and not on the side of the screen (like GNOME) .. Can uninstall useless apps, live tiles, etc. I will be happy.

    • Personally my main point of contention is need to MS to bury once easily accessible settings now several menus deep for the sake of "simplicity".
  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @01:45PM (#61490208)
    Microsoft's Windows has been off my radar since Windows 8. I want an operating system that manages my hardware and files, not something that tries to turn my home computer into a phone interface and steals my personal information. Widgets and live tiles, yeeeuck. If I want something from the Internet I'll get it myself. I don't need an operating system deciding what I need to see. No thanks Nadella, you screwed the pooch long ago.
  • Move them to the left side and people will think its a customized mac theme
  • Center adjusted icons in the task bar? What are we, savages?
  • And just as ugly as before. Give us some cues to separate elements and windows and other areas instead of this cursed white-washed flat look with tons of unnecessary whitespace.
    • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

      > tons of unnecessary whitespace.

      This. Microsoft have no clue about actual usability.

    • Maybe their UI designer is a Python fan?

    • Incredibly, Win11 looks flattery than Win10. MS made a dumb mistake when they promoted the cyclops diversity-hire to head of UI design.

    • by mccalli ( 323026 )
      I would guess that this has a dark mode option. I think the UI would likely look better in dark mode, but I still get (and agree with) your point.
  • by Crackez ( 605836 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @02:54PM (#61490550)

    Does anyone else feel like that's a screenshot from a KDE Plasma desktop? Or is it just me?

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @02:56PM (#61490558)

    It's terrible looking. My guess is they spent the most money on perfecting the startup sound. I can't say I blame them, for an OS like Windows that has to be rebooted all the time it makes sense. I don't even know Ubuntu's startup sound, in fact I don't even know if it has one.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by functor0 ( 89014 )

      I don't even know Ubuntu's startup sound, in fact I don't even know if it has one.

      Ah, so you didn't manage to get Linux audio to work either. j/k :P

  • by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @04:07PM (#61490808)
    The role played by the OS on your computer system should be:-

    1. Providing the Hardware Abstraction Layer so that the code you run doesn't need to be tailored for every variety of device your system can support...
    2. Providing the services of pre-emptive multi-tasking, to ensure that you can run multiple applications across your machine, including both foreground and background processes. This is also the mechanism which ensures that bugs in one program [such as an endless loop] can't lock your entire machine.
    3. Providing memory management, to ensure that each application gets memory reserved, that there are no risks of code or data belonging to one process being over-written by another, and for ensuring that malicious code can't get invoked...
    4. Providing storage management, by giving software access to local and remote file systems, by handling file pointers, file locking, directory management [i-node creation, extensions, block management, etc]...
    5. Providing security across the platform, by controlling access to all system resources, either directly - embedded in the core OS as basic functionality, or indirectly - for example through features such as a PAM [Pluggable Authentication Module] or an entire access management sub-system that can be de-coupled from the OS...

    Pretty much everything else - including a fancy GUI, embedded applications such as Web Browsers, etc. are and should be considered as applications running on top of the core OS.

    It is all too easy to think that merging all these features in to one huge blob of an install is a good thing. For many casual users, this might even be true. But it's also worth noting that this robs you of critical choices. What if you don't need a desktop?

    But the real reasons that we should care about and pay attention to this is because of the plumbing, because of all the "stuff" that we don't "see" any more, because it is hidden neatly behind a shiny window. This is pretty much the poster child for "papering over the cracks" and trying to hide the crap-piled-on-crap mess that any OS [I'm not bashing on Windows here] can become when the plumbing gets hidden away.

    If Microsoft stripped "Windows" back to just the core features that it MUST have - in order to call itself an operating system - and left the rest in neat, self-contained and user-selectable packages - it would be smaller, simpler, faster, more reliable and much, much more secure. It's been a long time since I have been developing code to run on Windows [and then it was VB/SQL, which I'm not sure counts] but the underlying OS can quickly become a quagmire. Although the OS rings are there, they are not well defined and there is a lot of unreliable code mis-using it. The general lack of "clean, well-defined interfaces" makes maintenance an nightmare.

    Ah well, we're only one release from Version 12... [youtube.com] [you have to wait or skip ahead to the 2-minute point, but it's prescient...].
  • by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Tuesday June 15, 2021 @06:53PM (#61491324)
    So I got my hands on the ISO. Some random thoughts as I play with it.

    New sound scheme, kind of like it, more subdued.
    New start menu should revive the industry for 3rd party start menu replacements from the 8/8.1 days. Lots of wasted space. When you first click it, you get your pinned items and recent docs, you have to click All Apps at the top to see your programs. Not a fan. This is dumb and they left enough space you could easily had the Win10 start menu layout here no issue. That said since this copy isn't activated or apparently in grace period, I can't customize it so maybe there are options to unfuck it some.
    Although you can move it back to the left at least
    New windows terminal is installed by default, finally
    Not a fan of the new radio buttons. Instead of a solid dot, the selected choice has a color circle
    Overall, the GUI changes are OK, nothing offensive (except the radio buttons) so far
    Control panel is still there, with most of the Win10 applets it looks like
    Widgets appear to be back in some form or another. Will need to wait to see if there is an API
    No pre-installed mobile games that I've found so far
    17.5GB for a base install of Windows 11 Pro (well and VMWare Tools)
    It does allow you to login initially without a password on a MS personal account. I used my user name and authentication app, never entered my password. Also had an option to use a hardware token. Honestly can't recall if Windows 10 lets you do this on first login. Going to try later in the week with a M365/AAD account to see if there is anything new there.
    Right-clicking on the task bar only gives an option for task bar customization. No menu like on 10 unless you right-click the start menu icon. Do not like. I use that all the time to quickly access the task manager

    I'm sure there is some other stuff hiding under the hood but honestly this build feels like Windows 10 with a new skin applied. I'm not seeing anything major jumping out at me right now.
    I'd post the name of the iso so others could go find their own copy under an internet rock, but apparently /. thinks it's ascii art. Sorry guys.

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