Windows 11 announced with widgets, Android apps support, new system requirements

Windows 11 release

As expected, Microsoft has formally announced Windows 11 operating system that’s basically Windows 10 with a new look, and some extra features such as Snap Layouts, Snap Groups, and Desktops to further improve the multitasking experience.

Windows 11 Snap Groups
Windows 11 Snap Layout

Snap Layouts and Snap Groups will allow you to select pre-defined layouts to quickly arrange windows as you see fit, and you can define multiple “Desktops” for work, gaming, or school, etc…

Other changes include Chat from Microsoft Teams integrated into the taskbar, new gaming features such as DirectX 12 Ultimate, Direct Storage for faster loading, or Auto HDR, a new Microsoft Store with support for Android apps through the Amazon Appstore, and AI-powered widgets to display useful information like calendar, weather, news, stock quotes, etc…

Windows 11 widgets
Windows 11 widgets

There are also features that have become deprecated or pushed to the wayside with, for example, Cortana not used anymore during installation and not pinned to the taskbar, Internet Explorer is now disabled, Tablet Mode has been removed with Windows 11 relying on new touch-friendly features depending on whether a keyboard is attached to the device.

Microsoft also touted some improvements under the hood, with Windows 11 waking up from sleep faster, faster Windows Hello security & web browsing, longer battery life. Windows Updates have been optimized with updates 40% smaller, and get ready for it: download and install in the background. If I understand that correctly, that means there’s no need to wait for minutes or hours for updates to complete while you are simply trying to turn off your computer!

System requirements have also changed, and the days when you could run Windows 10 on a mini PC with just 2GB RAM and a 32GB eMMC flash are well gone with Windows 11’s minimum requirements including:

  • Processor – 1 gigahertz (GHz) or faster with 2 or more cores on a compatible 64-bit processor or SoC
  • Memory – 4 GB RAM
  • Storage – 64 GB or larger storage device
  • System firmware – UEFI, Secure Boot capable
  • TPM – Trusted Platform Module (TPM) version 2.0
  • Graphics card – DirectX 12 compatible graphics / WDDM 2.x
  • Display – Greater than 9-inch with HD Resolution (720p)

Microsoft noted that additional storage may be needed for updates and extra features, so 64GB is probably the new 32GB, and 128GB storage is probably recommended.

Most computers running Windows 10 that meet the above minimum requirements should qualify for a free Windows 11 update later this year, or in early 2022. I’m not sure how many PC’s, laptops, or tablets come with a TPM 2.0 chip, but based on the information this is required, so if your device is missing the security chip, you may be out of luck. You can download the PC Health app to check for Windows 11 compatibility.

Windows 11 is scheduled for release later this year, but enthusiasts and developers should be able to install the first Insider Preview build for Windows 11 once it is released next week.

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9 Comments
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Anonymous
Anonymous
2 years ago

Other sites are reporting that once it launches, it will only need TPM 1.2.

It would be nice to see 4 GB RAM pushed out of the market.

I don’t get why they specify a screen size. What about GPD Win and other handhelds?

sola
2 years ago

Looks a lot like KDE on Linux.

Well, the sincerest form of flattery …

Jqpabc123
Jqpabc123
2 years ago

Which looks like macOS.

Willy
Willy
2 years ago

which itself looked like NextStep

tkaiser
tkaiser
2 years ago

Asides the ‘Dock’ concept and Display PostScript (though internally based on PDF in MacOS X) both OS looked not even remotely the same 🙂

I worked with both the classical MacOS and NeXTSTEP/OPENSTEP side by side over 2 decades ago. Back at that time the *STEP boxes and some office PCs running OS/2 were the only x86 machines around…

wanderer_
2 years ago

This. As a fervent mac OS hater, this makes me very sad.

exhibit A- 🙁

Willy
Willy
2 years ago

It’s fun to see that the standard has changed of camp. 20 years ago, we were trying hard to run Windows apps under Linux with Wine and Dosemu, using horribly bogus reimplementations of undocumented features, and we were bragging about being able to launch notepad or winmine without crashing for 10 minutes. There was Sun’s WABI which was extremely compatible and allowed to run virtually anything as well. Nowadays it’s the opposite. Windows needs to run Android apps to survive, so likely it emulates a Linux kernel… Long gone are the days were Balmer was saying that Linux was a… Read more »

tonny
tonny
2 years ago

Yeah. Windows 10 is a big mess. I wonder about linux’s future when fuschia took off and turn out a success. Last I heard, fuschia is binary compatible with linux. And on Linux, wayland is quite a mess IMO.

Gaetano
Gaetano
2 years ago

I think it’s terrible that W11 may run on a Coffee Lake and not ok a Kaby Lake. It can run on a Two core 8th Celeron, and not on a 4C/8T i7700. The Coffee Lake didn’t introduce so much rather than Kaby.

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