After what feels like forever, Microsoft is finally adding built-in RGB lighting controls to Windows 11. Yes, soon you'll be able to get rid of Armory Crate, Synapse 3, iCue 4, and all the gaming peripheral software, because you'll be able to control the RGB lighting of your peripherals and components through Windows 11!
Just kidding, I'm sure it won't be that easy.
Microsoft announced several new features for Windows 11 on Tuesday at its annual developer conference, Microsoft Build. The new features include a centralized AI-powered assistant creatively called "Windows Copilot," semi-fixed grouped taskbar items in Windows 11 (you'll now be able to manually ungroup individual apps, but still won't be able to ungroup all default items), and native support for file formats such as RAR—30 years after the file format was introduced—as well as 7-zip, tar, GZ, etc. via the open-source libarchive project.
And of course, the headline act (in my unbiased opinion as a peripherals editor): Dynamic Lighting. In a Windows Developer blog post, Microsoft acknowledges that "illuminated accessories are on the rise and can add energy and excitement to your PC experience" and that "many of these accessories rely on fragmented third-party applications and integrations."
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