Windows 11 has a new ‘Widgets’ panel that replaces News & Interests
Microsoft’s new Windows 11 OS features a brand new “Widgets” panel that’s pinned to the Taskbar by default. This Widgets panel is essentially just the Windows 10 “News & Interests” taskbar flyout, but housed in a slightly different UI. It connects to the same MSN service, and offers the same news, weather, sports, and finance updates.
Beneath that is your grid of interests, spanning from the latest news to sports leaderboards. All of this information can be customized and tuned to your liking via the MSN website. Frustratingly, none of the boxes can be moved around or rearranged, and clicking on anything will open in Microsoft Edge, even if your browser default isn’t the Edge browser.
Since this is still pre-release software, we’re not going to judge its quality or feature set. That said, having everything open in the web browser and now directly inside the Widgets panel is incredibly frustrating, and I hope Microsoft is able to improve this so clicking on things like “see full forecast” just expands the widget so I can see more, instead of taking me out of the panel entirely.
It also doesn’t look like this Widgets panel is developer accessible, meaning it’s only for Microsoft’s MSN service and not for third-party developers to build their own Widgets. Finally, it bizarrely requires you to be signed in with a Microsoft Account for any of it to function. If you’re not, you’ll just get an error asking you to sign-in. I also find it interesting that in this error, the Widgets panel calls itself the “Windows Dashboard.”
Microsoft really needs to build this feature out more if it wants anyone to properly use it, as right now, it’s a glorified MSN.com viewer, and I don’t think there’s much of a market for that. What are your thoughts on the new Widgets panel? Let us know in the comments.
Windows 11 has an improved snapping UX, here’s what’s new
The leaked Windows 11 build has given us a fascinating look into some of the new user experiences Microsoft is building for its next generation of Windows. One area that Microsoft is improving is in window snapping and multitasking, a staple part of the Windows UX that has remained much the same since Windows 7.