Fly On Wall Street

Windows 11 moves to finally kill Control Panel

Microsoft is continuing to transition users away from the Control Panel on Windows 11 by moving various options to the Settings app.

Windows 11’s latest preview build, version 22523, introduces key changes as part of the company’s “ongoing effort to bring over settings from Control Panel into the Settings app.”

The first major change sees links to the Programs & Features section in the Control Panel now opening in the operating system’s Settings application. Specifically, it’s been moved to the Installed Apps section. When the update eventually rolls out to all Windows 11 users, it means you’ll no longer be able to uninstall or change programs on a PC through the standard Control Panel access point.

Microsoft also decided to shift the Uninstall Updates option from the Control Panel to a new page found within Settings via the Windows Update and Update History sections.

As we’ve seen with certain aspects of Windows undergoing a complete user interface overhaul such as the taskbar, Microsoft is clearly preparing to phase out the Control Panel that’s been a mainstay feature for well over a decade in favor of its new Settings app, which was initially introduced via Windows 8. Until now, Control Panel was mostly immune to major changes, but Microsoft obviously intends to simplify it with the Settings app.

Other segments that were moved away from the Control Panel earlier this month with a previous build included advanced sharing settings. Network discovery, file and printer sharing, and public folder sharing are now all located under Advanced Network Settings in the Settings app. And Some of the entry points for network and devices settings found in the Control Panel are now redirected to the equivalent pages in Settings.

Aside from the Control Panel changes, the Windows 11 22523 preview build available for users enrolled in the Insider program also fixes several issues. One such problem that has been patched is a bug that caused ARM64 PCs to crash due to a memory management error. App icons should also no longer overlap the date and time operating on secondary monitors when there’s a lot of apps opened by the user.

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