Since summer 2022, Microsoft has been trying its best to organize a mass migration of users to Windows 11. But what to do if Windows 10 is too beloved by the community, and no one wants to change it for a “raw” OS? Offer something new, and better yet, innovative. The first feature update, Moment, was released six months ago, and in March of this year the developers introduced another one, Moment 2. It is hard to keep the intrigue with the updates, because the participants of the Windows Insider program have already tested the innovations and made recommendations for improvement. So, what will please the updated system this time?
Firstly, the Snipping Tool has appeared. Perhaps the developers are trying to force users to abandon third-party software in order to capture market share, but the tool’s functionality is very limited and there are no recording settings at all.
Second, Bing implemented support for an advanced chatbot based on ChatGPT in the taskbar. As a result, the search turned into a lively conversation between humans and artificial intelligence. Thirdly, the Notepad app now has tabs where you can store and keep several notes at a time! The above changes are some of the biggest and brightest in Moment 2, but there are quite a few smaller ones: expanded support for voice control, new widgets added, and improved support for Braille and more.
Following the release of the feature update, Windows Insider members received a new test build with the “File Recommendation” feature. The innovation only works if the user is authorized in their Azure Active Directory account. Most likely, the tool is focused on enterprise users, and the recommendations will be for those files shared with colleagues or owned by the user. Whether the recommendation system will make it to the final build or fade into oblivion is still unknown.
It’s worth remembering that in the fall of 2023 is expected to release Windows 11 23H2 – a major update that adds new features, improvements and fixes to the operating system. Given that there will not be any revolutionary changes in the update, it begs the question: why exactly did you like Windows 11, and how did you decide to migrate?