![]() Not all PCs will support this, but some of you will be able to use new “studio” effects to customize your look on video calls and streams without having to rely on the tools built into third-party apps. If your computer has a touch screen and/or transforms into a tablet, these new gestures - like a swipe up to open the Start menu - may help you get around Windows a little faster. ![]() This feature technically isn’t finished yet - Microsoft refers to it as a “preview” - but Voice Access was built to help people control their computers with spoken words, not keystrokes or mouse clicks. But in this update, you’ll be able to tell Windows which you’d like to see more of. Right now, Windows 11’s Start menu shows you a mix of files and software it thinks you should see, plus apps you might have “pinned” there for quick access. ![]() ![]() (A similar feature will arrive in Apple’s macOS Ventura software update in October.) Features like these - which can be hugely helpful to the hard of hearing and people who leave subtitles on all the time - are more common on smartphones than on computers, but that’s thankfully starting to change. Videos, podcasts, live radio streams - if you’re meant to hear it, Windows 11 will try to transcribe it on-screen for you.
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