
Snap Assist features Layouts and Groups, helping you arrange your open windows into perfect grids. The updated Photos app makes editing and viewing much easier.Ĭontinue right where you left off when you plug/unplug from your external monitor. Get faster load times and more detailed game worlds.įind the apps, movies, and shows you love faster and select from a wider variety of apps. Switch between desktops for greater organization of open windows. Reach anyone (for free) however you prefer (call, chat, text, video) right from your taskbar. Produces a wider, more vivid range of colors for a truly captivating visual experience.Ĭall, chat, and make plans come to life all in one app. Check out some of our new features and where we’ve made some improvements. We reimagined the way a PC should work for you and with you. If you'd like to know more about the differences between Windows and macOS, you should read our Windows 11 vs macOS Ventura comparison.Less noise, clutter, and chaos. Now, the question is, when exactly will Microsoft roll out this feature? Hopefully soon because we all needed it years ago. A lot of developers and regular users will benefit from the convenience of having an ‘End Task’ option available to them right from the taskbar.

It’s more apparent when you’re using both Windows and macOS, which has had the ‘Force Quit’ option for as long as I can remember. But not having a convenient way to do so has been a bane of my existence, and I’m certainly not alone here. I do realize there’s a method to Windows’ madness: force-quitting an app could lead to corrupted files.

It is, therefore, not exactly a straightforward process, and many non-Windows savvy users often end up having to Google ‘how to force quit an app on Windows’ to do so. Or, more annoyingly, you have to CTRL-ALT-DELETE and shut down the whole system. Force quitting an app on Windows is a painĬurrently, to end a program on Windows that’s essentially frozen – and therefore cannot be shut down by tapping the X button, clicking on the ‘Close window’ option, or pressing Alt + F4 – you have to open Task Manager or the Windows Command Prompt and close the offending app from there. Still, this find points to Microsoft possibly making the force quit option easily accessible for all users, and I think it’s going to be a welcome update.
