For Windows users who despise being kept in the dark on update installation times, this new ETA feature is a useful perk.
How to download Windows 11 preview build — get a sneak peek of the new OS Windows 11 new startup sound got leaked — and it sounds like Minecraft music Best Chromebooks 2021
Windows 11 adds new ETA feature for updates
Not knowing when your Windows update installation will complete is torture. Will it take 10 minutes? A half an hour? Two hours? Enquiring minds want to know! Fortunately, the folks at Microsoft heard all of our internal screaming; Windows updates will now help users gauge how long installations will take via time estimates. Ashwin at GHacks spotted the ETA feature when he was prompted to install an update while exploring the Windows 11 preview build. “It told me that this update would take 5 minutes to be installed,” he said. Ashwin added that he also found saw the time estimate when he navigated to Start > Power Button. However, this isn’t a consistent feature. Sean Endicott from Windows Central said that he, too, had an update waiting to be installed on his Windows 11 beta, but didn’t see any time estimates. Ashwin pulled out a stopwatch to time the Windows 11 update installation, and it looks like the five-minute estimate was inaccurate. The update only took 1 minute and 10 seconds. This isn’t a big deal, though. Perhaps Microsoft adds buffers to time estimates — and no one is going to complain about an update completing faster than expected. It might be wishful thinking, but we’re hoping this minute-long installation prognosticates the future of Windows updates. Microsoft Chief Product Officer Panos Panay claims that Windows updates will be smaller and faster in the next-generation OS. Only time will tell if that is, indeed, true. Check out our in-depth coverage on Windows 11 below.
More Windows 11 news
Windows 11: Your guide to Microsoft’s next Windows OS Windows 11 release date — when is Microsoft’s new OS arriving?Windows 11 revamped the touch keyboard — it now features GIFs, voice typing and moreWindows 11 new startup sound got leaked — and it sounds like Minecraft musicWindows 11 Taskbar and Start Menu get a modern remakeWindows 11 Search Bar: What changed and what didn’t Windows 11 gets revamped UI — see how the design changed from Windows 10 Windows 11 promises longer battery life for laptops, 40% smaller updates Microsoft Teams to be integrated into Windows 11 — What that means Windows 11 makes multitasking a breeze — how it works