Build 14986 was the 14th Insider
Preview build of Windows 10 Creator Update. It was released on DEC 07, 2016.
This arrived via new "RS2" (RedStone2) development branch.
Making Cortana awesomer:
- Turn off your computer,
change volume with voice commands: Being able to control your computer with just
your voice is one of the top requests we get with Cortana, so we’re
excited to say that we’ve added several new features to Cortana that let
you do just that. Now you can shut down your PC just by asking Cortana.
You can also restart, lock, or put the system to sleep, and raise and
lower your system volume with just your voice. Give it a try and let us
know what you think!
- Cortana loves
music: You can now use Cortana
to control music playback on more of your favorite music apps (EN-US
only). Starting with this build, we’ve enabled natural language
compatibility for iHeartRadio and TuneIn Radio. This
will work on both, above the lock screen (PC is locked) as well as below!
You can try queries like…
Play <Artist/Track/Title/Genre> on
<AppName>
Play Drake on iHeartRadio
Play Christmas music on iHeartRadio
Play NPR Hourly News on TuneIn
Play jazz music on TuneIn
Play Drake on iHeartRadio
Play Christmas music on iHeartRadio
Play NPR Hourly News on TuneIn
Play jazz music on TuneIn
Play <Frequency/Call Letters> on
<AppName>
Play 90.3 on iHeartRadio
Play KUOW on TuneIn
Play 90.3 on iHeartRadio
Play KUOW on TuneIn
While you are listening to music in one of these apps,
you can also use your voice to control playback and volume. With
radio stations, we often want to know what that catchy tune is that has played
a million times, so we added support for “What’s Playing”. Try
saying “Hey Cortana, What song is Playing?” and it will work for all apps
playing music. As a bonus, we made Cortana smarter by remembering the last
played music app so you don’t have to say “on Groove” over and over. All you
need to do is say your desired app one time, something like “Play jazz music on
iHeartRadio”; then the next time, just say “Play rock music” and it will play
on iHeartRadio.
- Adding music recognition
support to Chinese (Simplified): Cortana can now recognize music for customers in China. Simply
tap the music notes icon in the top corner of Cortana’s home page, and
Cortana will listen to whatever music is playing and use Netease to tell
you what song it is. This works exactly like the feature does in English
(United States). You can also say “Hey Cortana, what’s playing?” (except,
in Chinese, of course, so you’d say 你好小娜,这是什么歌) and Cortana will start listening to the song.
- Full screen when
Idle: We’ve made major
improvements to Cortana’s look when using “Hey Cortana” when your PC is
unlocked and idle. When your PC is in this state, asking Cortana questions
will result in a gorgeous full-screen experience that is optimized for far
field viewing! Give it a try by enabling “Hey Cortana” and then wait for
about 10 seconds or so without touching your PC. May we recommend asking
to see if it will snow tomorrow?
- Cortana sign-in using
Azure Active Directory (AAD) identity: This capability will
allow you to sign into Cortana with your work or school account instead
your MSA, enabling you to use Cortana even if your organization does not
support MSA. To sign in to Cortana using your work or school account, just
go to Cortana’s Notebook and “About Me” and sign in. You’ll get the full
Cortana experience with most of the same features. AAD join is
currently only available on Windows 10 PCs.
- Enterprise Cloud
Printing: The new Enterprise Cloud
Printers discovery UI under Settings > Devices > Printers &
scanners will enable corporate users to discover corporate printers when
on Azure Active Directory joined devices when the IT admin deploys and
configures the backend services.
This feature requires the corresponding backend
services to work, which are not yet available. Please continue to use
existing UI to discover and install printers in the interim.
·
Windows Game Bar improved full-screen support: In this
build, we’ve added support for 19 additional games in full-screen mode
with Windows game bar. As always, just hit WIN + G to invoke Game Bar to
capture a recording or screenshot.
·
ARMA 3
·
Battlefield 1
·
Civilization V
·
Dark Souls III
·
Fallout 4
·
Final Fantasy
XIV: A Realm Reborn
·
Mad Max
·
Mafia 2
·
NBA 2K16
·
Overwatch
·
Star Wars: The
Old Republic
·
StarCraft II:
Heart of the Swarm
·
The Binding of
Isaac
·
The Witcher 3:
Wild Hunt
·
Terraria
·
Tom Clancy’s The
Division
·
Total War:
WARHAMMER
·
Warframe
·
World of Tanks
Taking your Windows Ink experience to the next
level:
- Resuming previous screen
sketches: We’ve heard your feedback
that it can be too easy to accidentally lose your Screen Sketch sketch, so
we’re excited to announce that with build 14986 you can now resume
previous sketches! By default, when you open Screen Sketch, it will always
open to a new screenshot, but now you can click on the Resume button and
it will take you back to the sketch you were working on when Screen Sketch
last closed.
- Updated Ink Flyout
Visuals: The Windows Ink
pen, pencil and highlighter flyouts now show a preview of what it would
look like to ink with the currently selected color and width. This
improvement will be visible in any app that uses Windows Ink with the
Windows 10 Creators Update SDK. We’ve also updated the flyouts so that
they’ll no longer show what appear to be duplicate color entries when in
high contrast, now support using the Esc key to close the flyout, and have
returned the flyout to dismissing once you tap a color or change the width
(rather than staying open until you manually close it)
- Finer control over ruler
rotation: We’ve updated the Windows
Ink ruler to now rotate in sub-degree increments when you’re moving it
with touch, so as to make it easier to line the ruler up with two points on
the screen
- Polishing your inking
experience: The cursor will no longer be shown while you’re inking – we believe
this makes the experience feel even more like pen on paper.
New Extensions
in Microsoft Edge: Ebates, Intel
Truekey, and Read&write.
Updated Rendering Technology: We’ve changed
the rendering technology used for many types of UWP app content, so please
provide feedback through the Feedback Hub if you notice any new visual glitches
in UWP apps. For additional context on this change, we are now widely using the
same Windows.UI.Composition API that app developers have access to for XAML UWP
app and shell rendering.
Narrator improvements: Making our
products more accessible is a goal of ours and improving the experience when
using Narrator is a big part of that. As such, this flight comes with a number
of improvements, including:
- Narrator has a new
feature to give you additional information about fonts, colors, line
spacing, margins and more. Press Caps Lock + F to hear this information. Continue to
press Caps Lock + F to cycle through nine categories of
information. Use Shift + Caps Lock + F to move through these
categories in reverse.
- The default level for a
Narrator feature called Context Awareness is now set to 2. You will hear
additional information as you move around areas such as the Start Menu,
Office ribbon and more about the areas you are in. Use Alt + Caps Lock + /
to cycle through the different options. Zero means off for the
feature.
- The key to get advanced
information about the item with focus has been changed to Caps Lock + 0
from Caps Lock + F in Narrator.
- We fixed an issue from
recent flights where Narrator would only say “No item in view” when
placing focus on the Start menu tiles.
New Windows
Defender dashboard: We are making it easier for you to view and control
Windows 10 device security and health features available on your PC or tablet
with the availability of a new dashboard coming in the Windows 10 Creators
Update. Windows Insiders will get a preview of the new experience beginning
today. After upgrading to this build, Insiders will have to restart their PC.
After that, they can find the dashboard by searching for “Windows Defender” and
clicking on the search result that says “Windows Defender/Trusted Windows Store
app”. Remember, the dashboard is a work-in-progress and not fully functional
just yet.
Registry Editor improvements: Continuing our
theme of enhancing your registry experience, we’ve taken your feedback and
added the familiar File Explorer keyboard navigation shortcuts to Registry
Editor, so you can now easily go up (Alt+ Up arrow), backwards (Alt + Left
arrow) or forwards (Alt + Right arrow) in the registry. We’ve also added a new
entry point in the View menu so you can customize the font Registry Editor
uses.
The USB Audio 2 Class Driver and You: Previous builds
flighted to Windows Insiders have contained a Microsoft class driver for
devices that support the USB Audio 2.0 standard. However, if you had a
third-party driver which was specifically written for your device, Windows
would use that instead. In order to get more miles on the class
driver, we are temporarily changing things as of 14986 to prefer the class
driver over third-party drivers – this is so we can flush out device
compatibility issues and other bugs in our driver.
Improved Update
Experience: Windows strives to keep your device running the most
secure, reliable and feature rich version of Windows available with minimum
impact to you.
Improved high
DPI support for desktop apps
Bringing 3D to
Everyone: The View 3D Preview app comes included in Build 14986
and will enable everyone to easily open and view 3D models inside of Windows.
Simply launch View 3D Preview and select the open button and navigate to a
supported 3D object on your computer to view, rotate around, and zoom in on the
object. View 3D Preview supports opening .fbx and .3mf file types.
Improving Windows 10 in Asia
Along with Cortana’s new music recognition support for
Chinese (Simplified) that we mentioned above, we’ve also done a few more things
to improve the Windows 10 experience in Asia based on feedback.
Chinese Input Method Editor (IME) Improvements: We’ve heard your
feedback about the Chinese typing experience, and we’ve happy to announce that
we’ve made some changes based on what you’ve told us!
- Smart fuzzy matching for
pinyin and updated Microsoft Pinyin IME candidate pane experience: As part of our effort to
improve the efficiency of Chinese input, the Microsoft Pinyin IME
candidate pane has been updated to make it easier to find the candidate
you’re looking for. The IME now more clearly indicates fuzzy pinyin
candidates, along with tips for how to change the related settings. When
you’re typing, this feature will be triggered automatically when fuzzy
pinyin candidates are detected and it will show them in the candidate
window. We’ve also added a small icon to indicate when a particular cloud
candidate is trending. In addition, since most of these trending
candidates are related to hot stories, when you have that candidate
highlighted, we’ve made it easier to search and learn more about it.
- New context menu for
the IME mode: The IME mode indicator in the taskbar now has a context menu if you
right-click it when using the Microsoft Pinyin or Wubi IME! It contains
options to easily access that IME’s settings page, or show the language
bar.
- Microsoft Pinyin IME now
supports importing and exporting self-learned phrases: If you enable
self-learning, the Microsoft Pinyin IME can learn and store the phrases as
you use it to type. With this build, these phrases can be now be exported
and imported. This means that if you re-install your PC, or have multiple
PCs to maintain, you can now keep the same user lexicon.
- Wubi IME has been updated
to support user-defined phrases: You can add custom phrases manually, or import
and export custom phrase files. In the Wubi IME settings, click the
“user-defined phrase” button to enter the custom phrase page.
Line Mode for Chinese (Simplified) Handwriting: With the
Anniversary Update, the Chinese (Simplified) handwriting panel only supported
entering text using box mode – writing a single character in each box, and then
the character would disappear after the candidate had been finalized, and there
was no way to edit the ink. We’re excited to announce that with 14986 that is
now longer the case! Just like the Japanese handwriting panel, the Chinese
(Simplified) handwriting panel now supports line mode, so you can write and
edit your characters all in one continuous sentence. We’ve also added
two editing gestures for users – a strikethrough to delete, and
a circle to grouping.
New experience writing Chinese characters:
Deletion gesture:
Grouping gesture:
Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) Improvements:
- It’s now possible to remove text prediction candidates. To do this, hover over the entry in the candidate list and an ‘X’ button will appear. Removed candidates will not be suggested next time.
- Improving the Japanese IME conversion accuracy: Improving the conversion accuracy of Japanese IME is an ongoing goal of ours – with this build, we’ve enhanced our logic how we take into account previously determined context. To give an example, with the Anniversary Update, when typing “にんげんをやとう” in one shot and then converting the text, the IME would return the correct conversion. However, if you were to do the conversion in two parts (aka, type “にんげんを”, convert, and then type “やとう” and convert), the IME would return a different and potentially undesirable conversion. With the work lighting up with 14986, the IME will now return the same result in both cases. We have also improved learning behavior when user registered shortcut word (短縮語) is involved and added a new keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+.) so that you can flag particularly bad conversion errors. Conversions flagged in this way will be prioritized among all other mis-conversions when we investigate.
- Improved reliability and
responsiveness: We’ve improved the
responsiveness of the Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) and fixed an
issue where key input might sometimes get stuck in certain environments.
We also fixed an issue where the Japanese IME’s self-learning wouldn’t
work in certain environments, and fixed an issue resulting in being unable
to use the IME to enter text in a program that had been launched using
Command Prompt’s “runas” command.
- Improving the Japanese
IME conversion accuracy: Improving the conversion accuracy of Japanese IME is an ongoing goal
of ours – with this build, we’ve enhanced our logic how we take into
account previously determined context. To give an example, with the
Anniversary Update, when typing “にんげんをやとう” in one shot and then
converting the text, the IME would return the correct conversion. However,
if you were to do the conversion in two parts (aka, type “にんげんを”, convert, and then type
“やとう” and convert), the IME
would return a different and potentially undesirable conversion. With the
work lighting up with 14986, the IME will now return the same result in
both cases. We have also improved learning behavior when user registered
shortcut word (短縮語) is involved and added a
new keyboard shortcut (Ctrl+.) so that you can flag particularly bad
conversion errors. Conversions flagged in this way will be prioritized
among all other mis-conversions when we investigate. We rely on your
feedback to improve our conversion accuracy so please do report bad
conversion errors when you see them!
- Improved reliability and
responsiveness: We’ve improved the
responsiveness of the Japanese Input Method Editor (IME) and fixed an
issue where key input might sometimes get stuck in certain environments.
We also fixed an issue where the Japanese IME’s self-learning wouldn’t
work in certain environments, and fixed an issue resulting in being unable
to use the IME to enter text in a program that had been launched using
Command Prompt’s “runas” command.
Other changes, improvements, and fix
- We have improved the
Windows Hello face which may require you to “Improve Recognition” to get
recognized again. To do this – go to Settings > Accounts > Sign-in
Options and under “Windows Hello” and “Face Recognition”, select “Improve
Recognition” to go through the Improve Recognition wizard.
- We updated the Taskbar’s
context menu settings entry to now explicitly be called “Taskbar
settings”, as that is where it pointed.
- We fixed an issue where
the Virtual Touchpad’s left and right buttons might not work on some
devices. We also fixed an issue where the Virtual Touchpad wouldn’t launch
if the primary monitor was non-touch, and added the Virtual Touchpad icon
to the Taskbar settings where you can Turn system icons on or off.
- We fixed the issue where
apps such as Store, Photos, and People might launch on their own after
your PC had been inactive for a period of time.
- We fixed the issue where
navigating to Settings > System > Battery would crash the Settings
app.
- We’ve changed the default
state of the Handwriting Panel to be floating next to the text field,
rather than docked at the bottom of the screen. If you prefer docked-mode,
you can still select it by tapping the icon in the top right corner of the
Handwriting Panel.
- We fixed an issue where
using ~ to switch languages using the Thai keyboard when typing in Office
apps, such as Outlook or Word 2016, might sometimes result in a hang.
- We’ve updated our
migration logic, so that going forward from 14986 the default user’s
numlock setting will now be preserved across upgrades.
- We fixed an issue where
double-clicking on an Excel document to open it from File Explorer would
crash Microsoft Excel.
- We fixed an issue where
Windows Hello might get stuck “Looking for you”.
- We fixed an issue
Insiders with Surface Dial may have experienced recently where rotating
the Dial could result in unexpected beeps.
- We’re moving some things
around in Storage Settings – stay tuned for future updates. For this
flight, you’ll notice that the settings to change save locations has moved
to its own page. We also fixed an issue where Storage Usage for the Other
category might show an unexpectedly high number.
- We fixed an issue where
the PowerShell entry in File Explorer’s File menu would sometimes be
unexpectedly greyed out.
- We fixed an issue where
the Clock and Calendar flyout in the taskbar wouldn’t launch when the
display language was set to Chinese (Traditional) and the system was using
the phonetic sorting method.
- We’ve updated the full
screen Settings search results to now use smaller icons – we feel this
delivers an overall more polished feel, as well as enables more search
results to display on the page at a time.
- We fixed an issue where
some notifications might draw too high or too low, and then be seen moving
itself to the correct position.
- We fixed an issue where
the outline incoming notification toasts could still be seen if
notification banners as a whole for that particular app had been turned
off.
- We fixed an issue
Insiders may have experienced where the Favorites bar on desktop might
appear empty, despite having items in the Favorites folder.
- We fixed an issue that
could result in CPU throttling when idling on certain webpages with many
gifs or looping videos in Microsoft Edge.
- We fixed an issue that
could result in Alt + D sometimes not being able to set focus to the
address bar in Microsoft Edge.
- For Insiders with PCs
that upgraded to builds 14926-14959, some default power settings may have
been lost and not recovered on subsequent upgrades. The effect of this
causes devices to potentially use more power, change the power button
behavior on tablets, etc. Starting with 14986, an attempt to detect this
issue and re-apply the power settings will be made during upgrade. This
attempt is a temporary process to help address this issue for Insiders,
and will be removed once we’re closer to the Creators Update release.
- We’ve heard your
feedback, and updated our Windows Error Reporting logic so that uploading
crash data should no longer interfere with online game play, video
streaming, Skype calls, or other network-intensive activity. Please keep
an eye out for this if you experience any crashes and let us know how it
goes.
- We fixed an issue
resulting in Microsoft Studios games like Microsoft Sudoku, Jigsaw,
Minesweeper, Taptiles, and Treasure Hunt potentially freezing at the
splash screen on launch.
- We fixed an issue where,
if the taskbar location was set to be on top, it was visible on the
Welcome screens after upgrading.
Known issues
- Using keyboard monitor
hotkeys to adjust brightness won’t work as expected. Desired brightness
change could be done via the Action Center or by going to Settings >
System > Display.
- You may see a popup
“Catastrophic Error” dialog when opening OneDrive folders. If you do, the
workaround is to open an elevated Command Prompt or PowerShell window and
enter “attrib -O <path to OneDrive failure that resulted in the error
dialog>”.
- We’re currently
investigating reports that DirectAccess isn’t working for some Windows
Insiders.
- When using Microsoft Edge
with Narrator, you may hear “no item in view or silence when tabbing or
using other navigation commands. You can use Alt + Tab when this happens
to move focus away from and back to the Edge browser and then Narrator will
read as expected.
- Hey Cortana, play
<blah> on <AppName> doesn’t work immediately after installing
the app. Wait 5 minutes for indexer to kick in and try again.
- Currently, the Windows
Defender dashboard is primarily aimed at providing some minimal read-only
status for Antivirus/Firewall, with some very limited functionality for
interacting with the app. Here are some of the known issues with the
dashboard to be aware of (not a comprehensive list):
- Doesn’t accurately roll
up status of Pillars
- Doesn’t accurately show
status when a 3P AV is on the machine.
- History is not yet
available in the new app
- Advanced/Custom scans
are not yet available in the new app
- Settings are not
configurable through the new app
- Firewall control panel
not launchable from new app
- Firewall settings are
not configurable through the new app
Sources: Windows
Blog
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