Microsoft releases new Windows 10 preview with Eye Control, improvements to Edge, Console, and input
icrosoft today released a
new Windows 10 preview for PCs with therecently announced Eye Control feature, as well as improvements to Edge,
Console, input, and Windows Defender Application Guard (WDAG). This is the
ninth build of the upcoming Windows10 Fall Creators Update, which is slated to arrive later this year (likely
in September).
Windows 10 is aservice, meaning it was builtin a very different way from its predecessors so it can be regularly
updated with not just fixes, but newfeatures, too. Microsoft has released many such updates, including three
major ones: NovemberUpdate, AnniversaryUpdate, and CreatorsUpdate.
The biggest addition by far is Tobii’seye tracking technology, which was announced as coming to Windows 10 just
yesterday. The feature makes Windows 10 more accessible by empowering people
with disabilities to operate an on-screen mouse, keyboard, and text-to-speech
experience using only their eyes. You’ll need a compatible eye tracker so that
you can accomplish tasks normally done with a mouse and keyboard.
Eye Control is still in beta and only works with the EN-US
keyboard layout, but more keyboard layouts are on the way. It is also limited
to select Tobii hardware like the Tobii Eye Tracker 4C (support
for Tobii Dynavox PCEye Mini, PCEyePlus, EyeMobile Plus, and I-series is coming
soon). Microsoft says it is “open to working with additional hardware vendors
to provide customers a broader set of hardware options to enable this
experience.”
Edge has received a more modern look in the browser frame,
inspired by Microsoft’s Fluent
Design System. The company says its uses of Acrylic material “provides
depth and transparency to the tab bar and other controls” while button
animations are now “more responsive and delightful.”
Looks aside, Microsoft has made an important change to the address bar. When
it’s not in focus, clicking and dragging the text it will remain under the
cursor – previously the text would shift as the “http://” appeared, making it
annoying to edit parts of the URL. Edge also received fixes when copying
images, closing tabs in full screen mode, and tab ordering.
As part of the Creators Update, the Windows Console gained
support for full 24-bit RGB color. Now its default colors are getting their
first overhaul in more than 20 years, with the hope of improving legibility of
darker colors on modern screens. If you want to learn more about Microsoft’s
thinking behind the changes, head over to the Command
Line blog.
As for input improvements, the touch keyboard now launches
faster from the taskbar. Bugs related to dictation and Japanese keyboards were
also squashed.
WDAG has also received performance improvements, particular
to container launch times. The tool has received new status strings for
providing more detailed information when starting up, plus networking and
launching bug fixes.
This desktop build includes the following general bug fixes
and improvements:
- Fixed an issue where the battery flyout might have shown unexpected text for the % charged (specifically “%1!s!%2!s!% until fully charged”).
- Fixed an issue resulting in certain network setting being lost on upgrade and reverting to default. Specifically, static IP address configuration was reverted to DHCP, and networks marked private were reverted to public.
- If Storage Spaces broke for you, the fix in build 16241 has been expanded to remediate those PCs that were still in a bad state.
- Fixed an issue where if you switched to a new tab and back in Microsoft Edge, Narrator would start reading from the top of the page again, rather than remember where you had been on the page.
- Fixed an issue where right-clicking on a folder in File Explorer and saying Scan with Windows Defender wouldn’t work if the folder name contained #.
- Fixed a rare issue where the Windows Search Service might get stuck on initialization after upgrade, resulting in File Explorer showing “Working on it…” infinitely when accessing certain folders.
- Fixed an issue resulting in certain games such as Wargaming’s World of Tanks, World of Warships, and World of Warplanes appearing to hang/freeze shortly after launch when played on x86 PCs in recent flights.
- Fixed an issue where some Insiders were not being offered builds higher than Build 16241.
- Fixed an issue where connecting to a VPN using a solution downloaded from the Windows Store may result in a system crash.
Today’s update bumps the Windows 10 build number for PCs
from 16251 (made
available to testers on July 26) to build 16257. This build has four known
issues, so make sure to check those before updating.
Microsoft today also released a new Windows 10 Mobile build,
but nobody cares.
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