Hey Cortana, Remind Me to Explain Windows Ink

Cortana

Microsoft’s digital personal assistant has been updated as well. The most obvious change is that Cortana can now be accessed on the lock screen. If you’re not too worried about others seeing the lock screen, such as on a home PC, you can even have Cortana access your calendar and email on the lock screen. If you enable voice control with “Hey Cortana” you could even ask Cortana to play a song from across the room. It’s a nice feature, but on a PC it may not be that useful. On a tablet or mobile device, it might get a bit more use.

Perhaps the biggest updates with Cortana is just how much Microsoft has expanded the reach. While Cortana began as a feature of Windows Phone, Microsoft now offers it as a downloadable app on Android and iOS as well. That makes a lot of sense considering how the mobile smartphone game has played out, and gives Windows 10 users the ability to have reminders across their devices.

Speaking of across device abilities, Cortana can now send notifications from a smartphone to the PC. You can even reply to SMS messages on the PC using Cortana, which is pretty handy.

One other change has certainly caused some confusion prior to the release. The ability to turn Cortana off completely has been removed from the update, as well as the ability to assign a different browser/search engine via the registry - from now on users will be limited to Edge and Bing. You can opt to sign out of Cortana to remove the personalized features, but Cortana will still be the default search in the taskbar. It’s a change in policy for sure. As always, you can adjust what Cortana knows about you at any time by using the Notebook, and if you sign out of Cortana you’ll get a non-personalized version.

Windows Ink

It’s fair to say that Microsoft has been a proponent of the stylus input on computers for a long time. Over the years, the capabilities of the inking support have grown, and when Windows 10 launched last year, inking was a first class input method, with the ability to use the pen to write on any dialog box, and more. With the Anniversary Update, they are taking it to the next level with Windows Ink.

Windows Ink is a one-stop shop where you can easily access all of your inking apps, like Sketchpad, Sticky Notes, and others. It’s also an easy way to discover more apps built for the pen, and you can configure the pen here as well. It’s a smart idea to help people use the pen to get more out of the experience.

They’ve also added more features to the inking experience, including a digital ruler. It’s one of those “wow that’s so obvious” additions to the pen input, and being digital it can be more than just a straight ruler. Microsoft showed off at Build a version of Adobe CS with a digital French Curve ruler. I’ve actually tried to use an actual ruler with a stylus before, and it’s a pretty frustrating experience. The digital version is much easier to use, and more adaptable.

Some of the inking is even integrated into Cortana, and now Cortana can automatically decipher hand-written sticky notes in the sticky notes app, and create reminders based on them. Sticky notes are still one of the skeuomorphic ideas, but for some people they are indispensable, even as a digital version.

New Features And Built-In App Updates Edge and Xbox
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  • BrokenCrayons - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Microsoft has painstakingly monitored the OS usage of its users for a year now. Based on highly granular and detailed data they've collected, they build the best possible mix of software tailored to what they know best as the needs of the end user. Although you're getting things you think you don't need and feel like are being forced upon you, it's clear that eventually you'll realize your error and start using the things the company has decided are necessary.
  • CountDown_0 - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Spoken like a true brain-washed Microsoft fanboy, especially the last sentence. Congratulations!
  • Michael Bay - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    I bet you see MS zombies under your bed!
  • smilingcrow - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    If MS wanted me to see zombies under the bed I'm sure they could arrange it!

    Updated on Thursday and had some minor issues but it feels like one step forward and one step back.
    What is partly making me seriously consider rolling back to 8.1 is the fact they are removing features from the Pro version with this update.
    I suspected this might happen as you are buying into an open ended platform rather than a more static OS.
    If I still trusted MS to be competent and to do the right thing I'd stick with them but I don't trust them to do either.
    Maybe it's time to look at Linux and even a Hackintosh as I feel this chapter is closing.
    I still remember when I first installed NT 3.51 and was blown away.
    Many good years after with NT4, Win2K and then a slow decline since they stopped making a workstation OS and it was tainted by the merger with the consumer OS's needs.
  • Mr Perfect - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    That was clearly sarcasm on BrokenCrayon's part.
  • MrSpadge - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Dude, switch your irony & sarcasm detector on!
  • fanofanand - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Just because a statement doesn't have /s behind it doesn't mean it isn't sarcasm.....
  • K_Space - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    Surely you can't be serious? I mean I know nerds are not known for recognising sarcasm but common!
    On a separate note, in reply to an earlier comment: all of my opt out choices (that would pretty much be all of them), have been preserved. No reset.
    Cortana and voice recognition: I'm hoping we won't end up with a similar fiasco to the early Samsung smart TVs capturing voice data randomly and without permission for optimisation and analysis.
  • Ascaris - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    Common? What's common? That nerds don't get sarcasm? Only Sheldon seems to have that problem...
  • vanilla_gorilla - Tuesday, August 2, 2016 - link

    I can't tell if this is sarcasm or not. That's terrifying.

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