*Windows is getting an update. Here’s what you need to know.*

By Hayley Tsukayama
Washington Post

 April 27 at 9:01 AM

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2018/04/27/windows-is-getting-an-update-heres-what-you-need-to-know/


Microsoft said Friday that it has updated its flagship operating system
Windows to help us get more stuff done.

The new release — creatively called the “Windows April 2018 Update” —
introduces three major features. There's a new timeline view, a feature to
help you ignore distractions, and improved voice control.

“The spirit of this release is how it can help you get back time,” Yusuf
Mehdi, Microsoft’s corporate vice president of the Windows and Devices
Group, said in an interview with The Washington Post last month at
Microsoft’s Redmond, Wash., headquarters.

This is the first Windows release since Microsoft broke up the Windows and
Devices Group late last month, which has been one of the company’s core
departments for decades. That prompted a few people to declare the death of
Windows, which has been Microsoft’s flagship brand for years.

The cloud plays a major part in the new update to allow people to run
Microsoft's software on any machine, regardless of whether it's a Surface
or Apple Mac.

“Having Windows’s efforts align with the cloud will help us scale even more
broadly,” Mehdi said.

The Timeline feature fits into that trend, by creating a view that lets you
see what work you’re doing in Microsoft programs across devices. If you are
working on a Word document on your iPhone or your Android tablet on your
train ride into work, for example, Timeline allows for whatever you’re
working on in transit to show up on your work PC when you get into the
office.

With a new feature called “Focus Assist,” Microsoft is also riding a trend
with appeal to people evaluating how much of their life is spent with
screens: designing ways that technology can get you to use it less.

The feature will shut off your notifications for set periods of time to
keep you from getting distracted. Microsoft looked at research that said
switching tasks, even just to see a notification, can keep someone from
regaining their focus for 23 minutes, Aaron Woodman, general manager of
Windows marketing said.

You can flip the switch on at any time, or set times in your day when you
specifically want to focus. And, just in case you're worried you'll be
missing too much, you can set the feature to let through notifications from
certain people, such as your boss.

Windows is also looking, in some ways, to play a bigger part in your home
life, adding more features for its Cortana voice assistant. It's now
possible to control your Cortana-compatible smart-home devices from your PC.

The true place of Windows moving forward remains to be seen. It used to be
Microsoft's most lucrative product, a crown it has ceded to Office,
Microsoft's server business and even its gaming business in the past
decade. Under CEO Satya Nadella, there's been a marked shift on computing
in the cloud and on mobile devices, rather than on desktops and the
shrinking PC market.

But Windows still gives Microsoft half a billion users and drives its vital
personal computing unit, according to the company's latest earnings report.
So even if Windows is becoming more of a supporting player, rumors of its
imminent death seem greatly exaggerated.

The update will start rolling out Monday.
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