Tuesday, January 30th 2024
Windows 11 Preview Build Removes WordPad
Microsoft quietly added WordPad to its "Deprecated features for Windows client" list last September—a short message stated that the popular bundled-in word processing application will: "no longer be updated and will be removed in a future release of Windows. We recommend Microsoft Word for rich text documents like.doc and.rtf and Windows Notepad for plain text documents like.txt." The aforementioned "future" version of their mainstream operating system appears to be the recently issued Windows 11 Insider Preview Build 26040 (through Canary Channel). Microsoft is pushing an AI feature enriched user experience—last week's Insider blog reveals that Voice Clarity is escaping its Surface family confines; the application no longer relies on NPU hardware.
According to Preview 26040's accompanying notes: "Starting with this build, the WordPad and People apps will no longer be installed after doing a clean install of the OS. In a future flight, WordPad will be removed in an upgrade. WordPad will not be reinstallable. WordPad is a deprecated Windows feature." Many journalists have pointed out that protest efforts could save WordPad from its deprecated fate—enough fuss was generated over Microsoft's proposed axing of MS Paint, to warrant a reversal and eventual AI-enrichment. A segment of the Windows userbase will welcome the upcoming dismissal of Cortana (already effective in the latest W11 preview)—their older personal productivity assistant is being pushed aside in favor of Windows Copilot.
Sources:
Tom's Hardware, PC World, TechRadar
According to Preview 26040's accompanying notes: "Starting with this build, the WordPad and People apps will no longer be installed after doing a clean install of the OS. In a future flight, WordPad will be removed in an upgrade. WordPad will not be reinstallable. WordPad is a deprecated Windows feature." Many journalists have pointed out that protest efforts could save WordPad from its deprecated fate—enough fuss was generated over Microsoft's proposed axing of MS Paint, to warrant a reversal and eventual AI-enrichment. A segment of the Windows userbase will welcome the upcoming dismissal of Cortana (already effective in the latest W11 preview)—their older personal productivity assistant is being pushed aside in favor of Windows Copilot.
72 Comments on Windows 11 Preview Build Removes WordPad
Up next: "launching .exe files is now a part of the Microsoft Premium Package. You can subscribe for just $69.99 a year!"
The beatings will continue increasing in severity until morale improves.
How windows f_ed up and became the dominant desktop is a wonder.
These mouth breathes couldn't pour piss from a boot with instructions on the heal.
It is only a matter of time before IBM, Oracle or Google make a serious effort to turn WINE into something useful.
It already happened with IBM Symphony paving the way for Libre Office to devastate MS Office.
Drop the offline apps and replace them with AI, who will promptly direct users to cloud and subscription services...
Microsoft open sourced File Manager and a few other older Windows apps so perhaps they'll GPL this one and stick it up on Github.
Just hoping they won't backport "AI" as a separate update
I notepad if I don't use OnlyOffice at home and at work it's Office 365 E3.
Anything business related it's MS Word.
Heck, the W10 clean start of OS. No autorun stuff, except couple of non-MS services, couple drivers and that's it. 115 processes in the background at the very start. I don't even mention, the Defender and Updater, impede every program launch, unless, install the update and restart PC and manually disable defender.
Who in the right mind, adds sensors, gyro, screen block, and other phone-specific stuff on desktop OS? I know people can install Windows on some kind of mobile devices. But still. So many bloatware. And the worst part, they put this garbage in countless svhost.exe, and perplex it with key services. Such a scam. The OS and Defender behave worse than Win32:Trojan. If there's something to remorsely carve out from OS, this crap is what they should begin with.
Probably one of the open source editors will add some features to bridge the gap between basic text editor and full document editor but this is just annoying.
Not something I personally would remove but I've never bothered to use wordpad.
I still use notepad app from windows 7 along with it's snipping tool and paint so I wouldn't care if they removed 10-11's notepad.....
So don't think i'll miss it. If it wasn't for this topic - would relate to it only as a past thing, something i used mostly back with Windows XP.