Meet the next Windows 10: The Fall Creators Update connects across devices
It will all look better, too, with the new Fluent Design.
Microsoft has announced its Windows 10 Fall Creators Preview, with new features like Timeline, Pick Up Where You Left Off, and the new Story Remix. Here's what the new update will include.
Updated July 3, 2017 to reflect aTweet by Microsoft's Joe Belfiore (viaSupersite Windows) confirming that some eagerly anticipated Windows 10 features will come out sometime after the Fall Creators Update. Specifically, Timeline and the cloud-powered clipboard will not ship with the Fall Creators Update.
The Windows 10 Fall Creators Update is coming soon to right some wrongs. Revealed Thursday at the company’s Build conference in Seattle, the next major version of the operating system fills in some of the missing pieces we lamented in March’s Creators Update, and it makes it easier to work across multiple Windows devices.
As the name suggests, Microsoft will ship the OS upgrade “late this year.” Company executives declined to commit to a specific date, though Microsoft said recently that it will ship Windows upgrades in March and September. As a footnote, Microsoft also revealed that 300 million people use Windows 10 daily, a different usage metric to consider next to the500 million Windows 10 devices the company revealed previously.
- Timeline, which allows you to capture everything you were doing at a given moment in time on a PC
- “Pick up where you left off,” which allows you to take your work on Windows 10 to the related app on iOS and Android
- Cloud-powered Clipboard, which allows you to take clips from a Windows 10 device and access it on another associated Windows 10 device.
- OneDrive Files on Demand, which apparently (and finally) bridges the OneDrive gap, making those files visible and accessible via Windows 10's file system. .
On July 3, however, a Tweet fromMicrosoft's Joe Belfiore (via Supersite Windows) confirmed that Timeline and the Cloud-powered Clipboard would not be ready in time for the Fall Creators Update. Instead, Belfiore said they'd show up in a subsequent build.
Microsoft will also announce Story Remix, an app designed to automatically combine photos and videos together with a soundtrack, theme, and cinematic transitions, the company said. Finally, Microsoft will add SuSE Linux and Fedora Linux as part of the Windows Linux subsystem, available via the Windows Store. All the new features will be presented with a subtle interface change known as the Fluent Design System, previously called Project Neon.
What this means to you: If there’s a theme to the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, it’s connection rather than creation. Microsoft executives say this update is about making other devices great, even if those devices are not Windows. A user's Windows experience will move from device to device, using Microsoft’s mobile apps for Android and iOS. This apparently even includes Windows 10 Mobile (which appeared in part of the keynote presentation), though Microsoft has no further plans to discuss the platform at Build. (Ditto for themagical, mobile Capture 3D app.)
What’s new in the Fall Creators Update
Microsoft will reveal more details about the new features during the keynote, but we can make some educated guesses.
With Timeline, you can jump back in time into files, apps and sites, using a visual timeline to help you navigate. Timeline was described as an expansion of Task View, but it sounds like much more.
With “pick up where you left off," if you’re in, say, Word on your desktop, you should be able to pick up your (Android or iOS) phone and immediately continue editing. Microsoft has also previously promised a scenario where Edge webpages would become instantly available on other devices.
It’s unclear how useful Clipboard will be, though it sounds like it has potential as a quick-and-dirty file transfer protocol from one device to another. Uploading a file to OneDrive and then downloading it again can be an unnecessary hassle. With Clipboard, you can take a photo, map link, paragraph, even an animated GIF and then paste it on the other device—whether it be a phone or your PC.
OneDrive Files on Demand, meanwhile, will eliminate the gap between files stored on your PC and files stored on OneDrive. The so-called online files from OneDrive will show up in the Windows file picker, alongside apps that are stored locally. If you’re connected, clicking them will automatically download and open them, just like a local file. If you want, you can assign a file to be stored locally. You can also save entire folders on Android and iOS for offline access. Microsoft's Joe Belfiore demonstrated the feature by creating a file on a Surface Book, then showing how it could be accessed immediately on the person's Windows phone.
Microsoft executives added that Windows will try to download some files proactively behind the scenes. Intelligence built into the OS will guess which files you might want to access next—photos in proximity to another you’re editing, for example.
Story Remix, meanwhile, sounds like what Google already does with its Google Photos Assistant, stitching together photos into a slideshow
Windows 10’s new Fluent Design: a subtle update
If you’re expecting Microsoft’s new Project Neon or Fluent Design to be a grand remaking of the Windows interface, you’ll be disappointed—Microsoft’s words, not ours. Microsoft executives described it as a more gradual journey over time.
You can already see some very basic elements of Fluent Design in both the Windows 10 Creators Update as well as the more recent builds: the Aero-like transparency effects in the Start Menu, for instance. Look for similar transparencies in other apps over time.
According to Microsoft, though, utility, not aesthetics, will rule the Fall Creators Update. Expect the operating system to evolve as Microsoft continues to roll out Windows Insider builds until the eventual launch.
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