However, if you want to get a sneak peek of the updated apps, you’ll need to join the Windows Insiders program. Click here to find out how you can download the Windows 11 preview build so you can play around with the new, eye-catching features, too.
Windows 11 release date, beta download, features and moreThe best laptops of 2021
Updated Calculator app
The newly refreshed Calculator app now mimics your Windows theme. For example, if you’ve set Windows to dark mode, the Calculator app will follow suit — as it should! Microsoft added that the Calculator app has a new app theme setting, which lets users set the Calculator theme independent of what Windows looks like. In other words, you should be able to set the Calculator to dark mode while Windows is in light mode. Microsoft gushed about the Calculator app’s useful features, including its programmer, graphing and scientific options. “It’s the perfect tool to help you complete your math homework, manage your finances, plot, and analyze equations on a graph, and evaluate algebra, trigonometry, and complex math expressions!” Dave Grochocki, Microsoft’s Senior Program Manager Lead, said.
Updated Snipping Tool
Similar to the Calculator app, the Snipping Tool also has a new app theme setting so that you can transform the app into a different theme independent from Windows. Windows 11’s brand spankin’ new Snipping Tool combines the best features of two apps: the classic Snipping Tool and Snip & Sketch apps. To take a screenshot in Windows 11, users will have to use the Win + Shift + S keyboard shortcut. This shortcut will also pull up a snipping menu that houses a variety of screenshot options, including Rectangular Snip, Freeform Snip, Windows Snip, and Fullscreen Snip. “Once you’ve taken a screenshot, Snipping Tool provides editing tools for annotations, improved cropping, and more to edit your screenshots how you want,” Grochocki said.
Updated Calendar and Mail apps
Microsoft announced that it has added the “Windows 11 look” of soft, rounded corners to the Calendar and Mail apps. It was about time that the Redmond-based tech giant added the Windows 11 touch to both apps so that they can mimic the new look and feel of the next-generation operating system. We look forward to see whether all of these small tweaks culminate into a successful operating-system roll out in the future. Check out our oft-updated Windows 11 hub to stay in the loop about the highly anticipated OS.