-
Today we learned about Windows 11, and a key new feature in it, Windows Widgets. Considering that this appears to be the spiritual successor to Live Tiles, I would hope they would be at least as accessible to third-party developers. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Replies: 3 comments 6 replies
-
I'm looking forward to this feature too. I'd love to start working on some widgets sooner than later. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I think this is a great question and absolutely a dialog we should have! What would you like to see the developer story for Widgets in Windows 11 be? What would work best for you and why? What scenarios do you envision similar/different/above and beyond what you could do with Live Tiles? |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
I've mentioned this in other topics. At the moment the Windows 11 widgets UI seems to be a WebView2 panel on a thin Acrylic background, and all the widgets are web based with some JSON. The Widgets panel should become a space that embraces multiple technologies, all based on existing concepts. Web WidgetsURI anchors to web content that responds to a chosen size so it can adapt it's content - with support for offline PWA like content and behaviours which can be documented. Each web widget would be a self contained WebView that can be arranged among other widgets. XAML WidgetsAs is the case with GameBar Widgets, these would be XAML views/pages that are declared and bundled with downloaded apps. They could support background tasks if they are a more interactive or action orientated widget, and adapt to system themes. When WinUI or UWP apps are installed that provide a widget, then these widgets will be added to the list of available widgets. XML Payloads and Adaptive CardsWith Windows 11, any app providing Live Tile functionality will find them gone. Non live Secondary Tiles could be replaced with Start Menu icons, but there is no replacement for Live Tiles. However, instead of a Live Tile, the system could render these same XML payloads as a Widget. The same size options are there, for medium, large, etc. As well as handling the lost Tile functionality, Adaptive Cards are a good interoperable approach and they have support in key apps like Teams. They could render with XAML or more likely, HTML and web tech - so could provide interactive actions and "wizard" like tasks without having to leave the widgets UI. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
I think this is a great question and absolutely a dialog we should have! What would you like to see the developer story for Widgets in Windows 11 be? What would work best for you and why? What scenarios do you envision similar/different/above and beyond what you could do with Live Tiles?