Skip to main content

Microsoft planning separate news events to better focus on Xbox, Windows

 

Microsoft could be planning separate news events that might help the company better focus on what it has to offer to consumers from Xbox and Windows, according to The Verge. The events would come as an addition to both the all-virtual Microsoft Ignite and Microsoft Build developer conferences, which usually only discuss Microsoft’s consumer products in broader, separate breakout sessions or keynotes.

Recommended Videos

While the pandemic has already forced the company into no longer holding in-person events, it is believed that these separate digital news events could better highlight the changes happening this year across all of Microsoft’s product lineups. Apple has long done this with dedicated events for MacBook, iPhone, and iPad launches.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

We’re seeing the first of these new Microsoft events this week on February 4, where Microsoft plans to discuss changes coming to its Microsoft 365 service to “transform the employee experience.

Watch @SatyaNadella and @Jared_Spataro discuss ways to transform the employee experience. Save the date for our digital event. #EmployeeExperience https://t.co/LV5KjcwBPF pic.twitter.com/uHHbQlFdcX

— Microsoft 365 (@Microsoft365) January 28, 2021

While this is still a rumor, a Windows-themed news event makes sense. Microsoft is believed to be working on a “Sun Valley” update for Windows 10, which seeks to bring a new look and feel to the operating system. A separate news event would better spotlight these changes and give Microsoft a bigger stage to discuss Windows. Usually, it is reserved for discussions during breakout sessions and larger keynotes at its Build developer conference.

Also likely to be discussed at any such Windows event is Windows 10X, which is the new lightweight flavor of Windows 10 rumored for new devices only. An event putting a focus on Windows 10X could help Microsoft take on Chromebooks and further boost Microsoft’s presence in the education and enterprise markets.

As for Xbox, that news event could further elaborate on Microsoft’s plans for Xbox Game Pass, as well as Xbox Cloud Gaming. It was rumored that the Xbox Cloud Gaming could move beyond Android phones and come to Windows 10 and iOS devices via the web browser in early 2021.

With Google shutting down its own Stadia in-house game development studios, and Amazon beta testing its own Luna cloud gaming service, such an event gives Microsoft a chance to showcase its own alternatives.

The last time Microsoft held an in-person event for the media came in October of 2019. The company then announced the Surface Pro 7, Surface Duo, as well as the Surface Laptop 3. All hardware events for Microsoft since then have been virtual, but closed-door for the press only, with recordings later released on the company’s YouTube channel.

The company’s Build 2020 conference, though, was re-imagined as a digital experience, free for all to attend. Ignite 2021, the company’s annual event for developers and IT professionals has been confirmed to be all virtual as two free global virtual events. One already happened in September of last year and another one is coming in March of 2021.

With the pandemic impacting tech events like CES 2021, and beyond, it will be interesting to see how these new approaches to news events will shape Microsoft’s visions and its image among fans and consumers.

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
Microsoft is axing support for its own apps on Windows 10
The Surface Laptop 7 on a table in front of a window.

Microsoft has announced that support for Microsoft 365 apps on Windows 10 will end this year on October 14, as reported by The Verge. This is also the end-of-support date for Windows 10 as a whole, but the move is still a little surprising considering that Microsoft is now offering the Windows 10 Extended Security Updates (ESU) Program.

Anyone who joins this program for $30 can continue to safely use Windows 10 for a whole extra year -- so you might think that Microsoft would let them continue to use the Office apps too. That said, it's not like the apps will disappear, they just won't receive any more updates. According to Microsoft, this could cause "performance and reliability issues over time" but whether these issues will pop up within the ESU program's duration or not is anyone's guess.

Read more
Another frustrating reason to upgrade to Windows 11
A person looking frustrated at a laptop while sitting at a table.

As if you didn't already need plenty of reasons to finally upgrade to Windows 11, here's yet another.

The latest Windows 10 update, version KB5048239, isn't just failing to install -- it's actually updating successfully over and over again. This is the update that Microsoft first released in November 2024 on 21H2 and 22H2. As TechRadar reports, the software giant is rereleasing it again this month.

Read more
Microsoft finally wants to make gaming on handhelds less of a chore
The Digital Trends website on the Asus ROG Ally.

Whispers about an Xbox handheld have been circulating for a while now, but it looks like the project is still in the very early stages. At an AMD and Lenovo event this week at CES, however, Xbox chief Phil Spencer spoke to The Verge and dropped hints about Microsoft's plans to combine the Xbox and Windows gaming experiences together.

It seems this phrasing refers to bringing the strengths of the Xbox operating system to existing and future Windows gaming handhelds. Working on a handheld version of the XboxOS is part of the work the company will need to do to create an Xbox handheld, but it looks like we'll get to see ongoing developments way before that hardware is ready to come out. Spencer said that we should expect to see changes to the Windows handheld gaming experience at some point this year.

Read more