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Microsoft's spring update to Windows 11 is now officially live. New features include the first Amazon apps, a revamped taskbar, and more.
Microsoft will push the new features to your PC via Windows Update, the Microsoft Store, and new “experience packs” that will download quietly in the background and facilitate changes to the Windows 11 operating system. Updates to the Store will push new versions of Notepad and Windows Media Player, which will replace the older Groove Music app. Several years ago, Microsoft pulled the plug on the Groove music service. In fact, clicking on “Groove Music” within your app drawer should redirect you to the new Media Player app.
Here's what's new within the new Windows experiences for February 2022:
The addition of Android apps, via a subset of the apps available via the Amazon Appstore
The addition of a Weather app on the Taskbar
The ability to mute your mic in Teams, again from the Taskbar
Easier screen sharing in Teams, from your Taskbar
The (re)addition of the clock to multiple monitors on the Taskbar
Updates to Media Player and Notepad
The “update” may be delivered in chunks, so that certain portions of it may arrive earlier than others. For example, the updated Media Player and Notepad arrived almost immediately via the Microsoft Store on my PC, but the new updates to Windows 11 via Windows Update weren't available when clicking “check for updates” within the Settings menu.
Technically, it's not even fair to call the new release a Windows 11 February 2022 Update, although that may be what it will be known as. In a blog post, Microsoft chief product officer Panos Panay called the updates “new experiences in Windows 11” and not a formal update. The plan of record is to issue Windows 11 22H2 or whatever it ends up being called this fall.
Here's what you need to know about the new features.
Android app support
As with virtually all of Microsoft's new features, the new experiences arrived early within the Windows Insider preview program. We have a detailed story describing how to install Android apps on your PC via the Amazon Appstore and would expect that it will be the same under the new experiences as well.
Mark Hachman / IDG
Essentially, it's a one-step process. All you have to do is download the Amazon Appstore Preview app within the Microsoft Store and follow the instructions. Windows establishes a virtual machine of sorts on your PC and downloads the necessary files in the background. Interestingly, formal VMs typically require Windows 11 Pro. In this case, Android apps will run on top of Windows 11 Home, provided you have the necessary hardware to run the operating system.
Is it worth it? Sort of. The limited number of apps (under 60) means that there's a lot of clunkers within the current offerings — the type of apps you'd uninstall from a new PC. But apps for United Airlines and The Wall Street Journal also mean that there's enough there to check out. Google's own app store isn't available, either, without some modifications.
A redesigned Taskbar
If you're familiar with our original Windows 11 review, you know that we took issue with the redesigned Taskbar and Start menu. You'll be happy to know that certain things have been fixed…and others haven't.
As the bulleted list above notes, head-scratching omissions like the removal of the clock from the taskbar on anything but the main display have now been restored. What's slightly disappointing is that two of the new features — muting the mic and sharing your screen — seem to be exclusive to Microsoft Teams, not any app that uses your mic. In other words, while using Teams, you'll see a little mic icon appear on your Taskbar. (A mic icon already appears when using an app like Zoom, but clicking it simply takes you to the Windows 11 Settings page and mic permissions). Now, while using Teams, clicking that mic icon will simply mute your mic.
Likewise, the new update also facilitates screen sharing — again within Teams. While in a Teams call, if you hover your mouse over your taskbar, you should see a small thumbnail of the active window as well as a button to share the screen. Clicking it will simply project it for others to see.
Finally, the Weather icon has arrived on the Taskbar. On Windows 10, this is known as “News and Interests.” On Windows 11, the Weather icon is a shortcut to the Widgets menu in the left-hand corner by default. While you're using another window, the weather icon will simply show a small summary of the weather (sunny, partly cloudy, and so on) and temperature. Hovering over it will open the Widgets drawer, which may be a surprise.
The new Windows Media Player app
As noted above, Windows Media Player replaces Groove Music, whose utility became questionable when Microsoft killed off the Groove Music Pass five years ago (!) in 2017. Now, Media Player works like you'd expect. Pick a music file, play it, and go on from there. There's no integration with Spotify and no visualizer, but there is basic functionality for both audio and video playlists.
Mark Hachman / IDG
While the app itself doesn't list the audio/video formats it supports, it's at least nicely integrated with your Music, Videos, and Downloads folders, finding my collected audio and video files and presenting them within the app's context. Supposedly, the apps also pulls content from OneDrive even with a specific music folder added to the music library.
The new Notepad
If you're not a frequent Notepad user, you'll wonder what's changed. If you are, you may notice the new Dark Mode and how Notepad adapts to your Light Mode/Dark Mode system settings. Otherwise, the most noteworthy additions are multi-level undo (hurray!) and emojis (okay?).
Microsoft didn't say whether or not it would be adding to these new “experiences” over time. In any event, it's a bit of fresh paint for Windows 11.
Microsoft has said previously that it plans to issue feature updates to Windows 11 once per year, in the fall. But the company said Wednesday that it plans to issue a “public preview” of Android apps running on Windows, among other features, next month.
Microsoft's announcement came at the end of a Wednesday blog post authored by Panos Panay, chief product officer of Windows + Devices at Microsoft. The blog post reiterated many of the claims made by chief executive Satya Nadella during the company's earnings call, such as the claim that 1.4 billion users now use Windows. Panay also reiterated many of Microsoft's thematic statements, such as how the world has evolved into a hybrid working environment.
It was what's next for Windows, though, that was the most interesting part of his statement. “Next month we're bringing new experiences to Windows that include a public preview of how you can use Android apps on Windows 11 through the Microsoft Store and our partnerships with Amazon and Intel, taskbar improvements with call mute and unmute, easier window sharing and bringing weather to the taskbar, plus the introduction of two new redesigned apps, Notepad and Media Player.”
All of these features have been “released” previously as part of the Windows Insider program, specifically for members of the Windows Insider Dev Channel, where Microsoft tests out new code. Microsoft has said previously that the Dev Channel is reserved for code that may not ever be released publicly, while the Beta Channel and the Release Preview channel are for those who wish to test builds associated with an upcoming release.
That language makes Microsoft's plans a bit murky. It's possible that Microsoft may simply be making these experiences available to the Beta Channel, as a way of offering them up for more public testing. Microsoft could also be planning on releasing these capabilities through some other means, as it has done with other “preview” apps., or to the stable version of Windows, too.
Unfortunately, when asked for clarification, Microsoft representatives declined. “Right now we have nothing further to share beyond what is in the blog and should have more info next month,” a representative said in an email.
Still, it's not clear whether Microsoft will make next month a quasi-feature release, with new features, or just a new release in the Beta Channel. In any event, it sounds like Microsoft is at least committing to these new features as ones that will be included in a future Windows feature update.
This story was updated at 11:42 AM with a statement from Microsoft.
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