Microsoft action center application status12/20/2023 ![]() If system resource consumption is a concern, then there should a way to optimize them. Better than hiding them in a Start menu or Action Center. Have them pinned in Desktop/Homescreen which makes them glanceable and always available when there is no app/window on that screen. This at least give a transition until the developer adopts/switch over to the new Widget framework. ![]() They can even have backwards compatibility for existing apps using Live Tiles where you can pin them like Widgets but without buttons or something to interact with except for opening the app. Widgets have interactivity that Live Tiles does not (Interactive Live Tiles were supposed to do this but mysteriously abandoned before the launch of Windows 10). Widgets system is the most obvious if not the best replacement for Live Tiles. Yeah, I'm fine without Live Tiles if there is a replacement for it. What are your thoughts on the new Action Center so far? Let us know in the comments. This is prerelease software, so there's still time to add and improve things. You can't see your calendar overview from clicking the clock anymore, for example. I really appreciate the added functionality with the ability to configure certain quick actions from directly within the Action Center itself, but it is missing things. That's our closer look at the new Action Center on Windows 10X, shaping up as a sizeable improvement over its predecessor. Clicking on your user picture will give you options to lock and sign out of your PC. You've also got power options, a settings shortcut, and your user profile picture located at the bottom right, as those functions no longer reside with the Start menu on Windows 10X. The Action Center also acts as your system tray overflow, with details like battery percentage appearing in the bottom left on a device with a battery inside. ![]() You can jump into the Windows Settings app to further control where and how notifications appear, and there's a "Clear all" button at the top right of the notifications panel. ![]() It houses all your notifications, and groups them under different apps when they come in. The notifications panel that sits above the music control and quick settings panel behaves similarly to Windows 10. Source: Windows Central (Image credit: Source: Windows Central) ![]()
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