Microsoft propose une nouvelle construction de Windows 10, la build 21382. Elle est déployée dans le cadre du programme Windows Insider et s’adresse aux PC inscrits sur le canal Dev.
Le plus grand changement introduit par cette mise à jour concerne la prise en charge du HDR. Une nouvelle option fait son apparition. Elle concerne certaines applications dites de création qui utilisent les profils couleur de l’International Color Consortium (ICC). Nous retrouvons par exemple Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Lightroom Classic et CorelDraw. Son objectif est de permettre à ces logiciels d’obtenir des couleurs précises et d’accéder à toute la gamme du moniteur HDR.
Windows 10 build 21382
En parallèle le gestionnaire de périphériques s’enrichit de nouvelles options de tries. Elles permettent d’améliorer la gestion des pilotes. Microsoft explique
« Les nouvelles vues « Devices by drivers », « Drivers by type » et « Drivers by devices » permettent aux utilisateurs de visualiser, d’installer et de supprimer les pilotes, tandis que la nouvelle action « Ajouter des pilotes » permet aux utilisateurs d’ajouter et d’installer de nouveaux pilotes sur tous les appareils applicables. »
Le gestionnaire de fichiers profite d’une mise à jour de l’icone « dossier ». Elle indique désormais si du contenu est présent.
Enfin le clavier tactile a été améliorer pour prendre en charge la nouvelle police par defaut du système d’exploitation « Segoe UI Variable ».
A tout ceci s’ajoute de nombreux correctifs de bugs. Parmi les plus important nous avons la résolution d’un problème annoncent à tord la fin de la prise en charge de Windows 10. Microsoft corrige un souci de stabilité d’explorateur.exe et l’erreur 0x80070003 de Windows Update chez certains utilisateurs.
Windows 10 build 21382 est une version « preview » à considérer comme telle. En clair il n’est pas conseillé de l’utiliser sur un PC de production.
Note de version
Windows 10 build 21382 - note de version
Bringing HDR support to color managed apps
HDR mode changes the behavior of some creative and artistic apps that use International Color Consortium (ICC) display color profiles, such as Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Lightroom Classic, and CorelDraw (amongst others). In the past, these apps were limited to targeting the sRGB color gamut.
We have added a new feature that lets these apps get accurate color and access the full gamut of your HDR display. To turn this feature on, close your application, right-click the app’s icon and click in Properties > Compatibility tab and then under Settings select “Use legacy display ICC color management”. This flag only has an effect in HDR mode.
Changes and Improvements
- As some Insiders have noticed, Device Manager now has the ability to view drivers alongside of devices. The new driver focused “Devices by drivers”, “Drivers by type”, and “Drivers by devices” views enable users to view, install, and remove drivers, while the new “Add drivers” action enables users to add and install new drivers across all applicable devices. Managing drivers directly is more intuitive in many situations than working with them by way of the devices they are installed on, so we hope that developers and power users alike will enjoy the added flexibility. This change was added in Build 21343.
- The Start menu will launch to help people get to the apps they want quickly after a clean install or upgrade is finished.
- We’ve updated the new generic folder icon in File Explorer so it will now show an indication when the folder has contents.
- We’ve updated the touch keyboard to use the Segoe UI Variable font and made some small adjustments to the icons.
Fixes
- We fixed an issue in the previous flight where after updating some devices unexpectedly showed a warning in the taskbar indicating the version of Windows 10 had reached end of service.
- We fixed an issue impacting explorer.exe reliability.
- We fixed an issue that could result in multiple hung SearchProtocolHost.exe processes.
- We fixed a memory leak that could result in DWM unexpectedly using a lot of memory over time.
- We fixed an issue resulting in certain notification toasts unexpected not firing.
- We fixed an issue resulting in delayed audio playback on ARM64 devices.
- We fixed an issue where the new unified audio endpoint work wasn’t displaying on ARM64 devices.
- We fixed an issue that could result in certain games launching to a black screen in recent builds.
- We fixed an issue where if you select the System option after pressing WIN + X it would just open Settings and not navigating to the About page.
- We fixed an issue resulting in certain devices unexpectedly being listed twice on the Printers and Scanners page in Settings.
- We fixed an issue that could result in Windows Update failing with error 0x80070003.
- We fixed an issue that could cause pixilation when a colored mouse pointer was set to be a large size.
- We fixed an issue where the cursive style for closed captions wasn’t displaying in the list on the Captions page in Settings.
- We fixed an issue where Japanese touch keyboard in 50-on or 12-key layout could show a non-functional and broken text candidate.
- We fixed an issue where incorrect spacing was applied when using the voice typing to type a parenthesis.
- We fixed an issue where when using the handwriting panel to write Chinese, pressing the return key wasn’t committing the text.
Known issues
- The Windows Camera App currently does not respect the default brightness setting set via the new Camera Settings page.
- We’re investigating an issue where elements of Search (including the search box in File Explorer) are no longer displaying correctly in dark theme.
- [News and interests] We’re investigating an issue where the flyout may occasionally flash in the top left corner of your screen after clicking the button on your taskbar.
- During the upgrade and in the initial welcome screens when after first signing in after upgrading, you may unexpectedly see the text that appears to be displayed in Times New Roman font.