So how does that compare to the previous Windows Feature Experience Pack? There’s certainly more in it. ![]() As before, you can find a “” app:Īnd we can look at that packages source folder to see what it contains: So let’s revisit that and see what’s changed. I wrote about that general idea a few months back, Digging into the Windows Feature Experience Pack. That’s this idea of a “feature pack” implementing this new functionality, something that could be updated separately from the OS. There was one specific area in my previous post that I wanted to dig more into. And yes, you can turn it off and go back to the “classic” start menu, at least for a period of time, by setting a policy/registry key. As expected, there is a new shell UI, with a (surprisingly different) Start menu. Looking at the build, many things are confirmed.īut what’s interesting to me is how this works. So of course I did (in a VM, where I could do no real harm - your security folks would hate you otherwise), as a next step from my Will there be a Windows 11? post. And if you wanted to download it from sketchy websites to try it out, you could. It’s a production-signed build, not a flight-signed build, so it’s close (enough) to a released version. If you missed the flurry of articles posted today, there was a leak of an ISO containing a fairly recent build (from May 30th) of Windows 11, build 21996.
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