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Four years ago, in 2021, my review of Windows 11 called it "unnecessary," in part because of the unappealing Start menu that carried over from Windows 10X. Microsoft has since tweaked the Start menu, testing a "categories" view of Start and then bringing it to Windows alongside a new "phone companion" dashboard.
A new blog post (via Windows Central) in the Microsoft Design "Beyond the Surface" series shows something else the company has been thinking about: bringing in notifications and functionality from other areas of Windows. For example, at least one concept notified the user about an upcoming meeting, along with a warning to turn off their out-of-office message.
Microsoft said that it had four "guiding stars": that the user's entire apps library should be "right there;" that you should be able to "make it yours;" that "each pixel must earn its keep" in accelerating your day; and icon memory must be maintained.
Each design concept was creat
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