![]() ![]() StagingTool has a lot in common with a third-party app called ViVeTool, which testers have used to switch on announced-but-unavailable and as-yet-unannounced features in new Windows builds. ![]() Advertisementįurther Reading Microsoft commits to updating Windows 11 once per year, and also all the time Those quests and the tool itself have since been removed from Microsoft’s servers, but StagingTool is already being freely distributed among Windows enthusiasts who want more control over the features they see (Microsoft's official link is dead, and you should be careful when using third-party download links for any kind of executable file). And now StagingTool has leaked to the public, thanks to a “bug bash” the company is running this week to find and fix problems before the next big batch of new Windows features releases this fall.Īs reported by The Verge, some bug bash participants were sent on “quests” that explicitly mentioned using the StagingTool to turn on specific features. Users normally have little control over whether new features actually appear in their Windows beta installs, but Microsoft has internal software called StagingTool that its own developers can use to switch things on and off themselves. Sometimes it’s because the company is A/B testing a couple of different versions of the same thing or because Microsoft wants to roll out major changes to a few users before rolling them out to everyone. When Microsoft releases new test builds of Windows, there are usually a handful of features that are announced but only actually enabled for a small subset of testers.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |