Windows 11 Pro 22H2 Build 22621.1344 (No TPM Required) With Office 2021 Pro Plus Multilingual Preactivated For Pc

 Windows 11 Pro 22H2 Build 22621.1344 (No TPM Required) With Office 2021 Pro Plus Multilingual Preactivated For Pc

Windows 11 Pro 22H2 Build 22621.1344 (No TPM Required) With Office 2021 Pro Plus Multilingual Preactivated For Pc
Windows (x64) | Languages: Arabic, English, German, Greek, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese-Portuguese, Portuguese-Brazil, Turkish | File Size: 9.1 GB

Windows 11. The most important part of this announcement was about a big change to the user interface called “Sun Valley.” We already know many UX changes will come from the Windows 10X shell, but Windows 10X isn’t sold. Now, as expected, information about Windows 11 has started to leak.


What’s new in Windows 11? The look of Windows 11 will change completely. Microsoft needs a good reason to go back on what it has said in the past and still ditch Windows 10 by making a new number for its operating system. And a brand new design is a great way to do that. The company based in Redmond, Washington, has been working on a redesign for an update with the code name “Sun Valley” (or “Sun Valley”) for a long time. It was Windows 11 when it was called “Sun Valley.” The Sun Valley project was talked about on the Internet for a long time. Microsoft regularly shared information about the new interface style, insiders shared information that wasn’t known before, and well-known designers in their circles used all of this information to create realistic concepts.



– Elements from the start and the system will float above the bottom bar. The start is the first thing you see when you open a new version of Windows. Not surprisingly, developers will change it again in Windows 11, but this time it will be more about how it looks than how it works. The Start window will float above the bottom bar. We must agree that this small change gives the system a more modern look. From what I’ve heard on the Internet, Microsoft won’t change the “insides” of this menu very much. Instead, they will only change how the window looks. The control panel will also float and look like the “Start” button. The action center and the control buttons will be put together. Other operating systems have had something similar for a long time. Almost every mention of this new menu says it will be island-style, with the controls on one panel, the notifications on another, and specific elements (like a player) on a third. Right angles will go away, and fillets will take their place. In reality, insiders and concept designers disagree on this point. Some are sure that Microsoft will stick to its traditions and keep right angles, while others are sure that in 2021, Microsoft will follow the trend for fillets. The second one is more in line with what is meant by “completely new Windows.” Hovering menus are not enough to make a new design truly new. Fillets should affect almost everything in the system, including context menus, system panels, and all application windows. Even on this subject, concept designers have different ideas. Some draw fillets in all interface elements, while others use right angles.

– There will be blur everywhere, and the background will be see-through. On the web, people have different opinions about how the windows are displayed, how the corners are made, and how the menu seems to float, but almost everyone agrees that the windows should be clear. Most leaks and design sketches show blurring and transparency in all windows, at least in the Start menu or Explorer. Even the canceled Windows 10X operating system, which Microsoft was making for devices with two screens and weak devices simultaneously with the Sun Valley project, has some of these effects. Acrylic transparency means new effects will be used when an element hovers over, and more space will be between elements. The parts of the interface where the user interacts will get bigger, and page titles will get thicker



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– A new font that has been shown before. Most likely, Windows 11 will use the responsive Segoe UI Variable font as the default font. This font has already been used in Windows 10 Build 21376 for Insiders. Its best feature is that it works well for small and large inscriptions. This makes it different from regular fonts, which are made to start either small or big. For example, Windows 10’s stable version uses the Segoe UI font, made for 9pt. When written small, it’s hard to read; it looks like it doesn’t say anything when written big.

– There will be new icons in Windows 11, and the ones from Windows 95 will disappear. They are still used today, yes. Microsoft is finally going to change the icons used all over the system. It’s not just about making shortcuts to folders, trash cans, and other Explorer icons. We’re talking about all the icons in the Shell32 directory. There are still Windows 95 icons, and Microsoft recently changed its appearance in one of the insider assemblies. Of course, they will move to Windows 11.

– Windows 11 will have a lot of small, useful changes, but there are many of them. Much less is known about the update’s features than about how it will look. But since Windows 11 and Windows 10X (the canceled OS for weak and foldable devices whose image got out on the Internet) were made simultaneously, we can be sure that all the features from Windows 10X will be in Windows 11. For example, Windows 11 will show in the system tray that the camera is being used when the camera is being used on the computer.


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