Results for: windows engineers

Shoutout to the wonderful Windows Engineers!
This conversation is a shoutout to the wonderful Windows engineers, those people who have tirelessly worked day and night to make everday computing as easy as cutting a cake. These are the engineers who worked hard to make computing a cheap and readily available thing, rather than being a luxury that only the rich can afford. These engineers are the ones who make it possible for Windows to be what it is today. The endless possibilities that we have come to associate with Windows is possible all thanks to these engineers. Thank you to the whole Windows team, from the ones who sit down everyday to attend to technical issues around the world, to the ones who designed the operating systems, to those who write the actual code of the operating system. A huge thank you to all of you!

Windows Engineering Immersion Experience
The Windows Engineering team explores Microsoft Stores in Portland!

Intro to Windows Community
Be part of the Windows Community! Anita George, Windows Community program lead, shares what it's about.

engineers responding to feedback
hi there: This is more of a suggestion. In the feedback hub, when I sent out a feedback, there is 1 or 0 upvote without any official response. I know that it is difficult for the engineers to actually respond to individual feedback, but all feedback is important, regardless of how many upvotes received. Even if only 1 upvote received, the feedback can make a big difference in Windows 10. I wish that there is a feature in the feedback hub where an engineer can respond and ask, why did you submit that feedback or why are you facing that issue or why do you want a certain change.

Windows Community interviews Windows enthusiast: Mayank Parmar
Mayank Parmar covers Microsoft and Windows-related stories on WindowsLatest.com. Learn what his three favorite Windows apps are and how he puts them to good use.

Meet Analy and Matt: Getting you there with Maps
Meet Analy Otero Diaz and Matt Cooley, Windows engineers who help make Windows Maps do the amazing things it does.

What was your first version of Windows?
What was your first version of Windows?

Accessibility Features in the Windows 10 May 2020 Update
There are number of new accessibility features built into the latest 2004 update. Based on user feedback, we have made Narrator easier to use and you can now use Magnifier to start reading text out loud. See this blog post for more detail: https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2020/05/21/whats-coming-in-windows-10-accessibility/. We'd love to hear what you think Anne Budd and the rest of the community.

Meet Kelsey and Amanda: Reaching out to customers
Amanda Finney and Kelsey Hrubes from the Windows Community team help bring the community together with social media and the Windows Community website.

Have you been using Microsoft Family Safety?
Family Safety empowers you and your family to create healthy online habits. The Family Safety team is rolling out new experiences for how you manage your family's technology, and they'd love to know what you think! Share your experience/feedback in the comments. See more info on Family Safety here: aka.ms/msfamilysafety
Windows Engineering Guides | Microsoft Docs
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/test/wegPerformance - Windows Engineering Guide. The Performance WEG provides a roadmap to delivering high-performing and power-efficient PCs to customers. It identifies opportunities to measure, analyze, and improve performance in key areas, including battery life, browsing experience, and streaming media.
Engineering@Microsoft
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/engineering-at-microsoftMicrosoft has over 100,000 software engineers working on software projects of all sizes. Keeping those engineering teams productive while meeting their ever-increasing scale demands is a big challenge. Read about the One Engineering System (1ES) initiative in this inaugural post on the Engineering@Microsoft blog.
Performance - Windows 10 Engineering Guide | Microsoft Docs
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/test/weg/weg-performanceThe Performance Windows Engineering Guide (WEG) provides guidance on how to deliver a great Windows experience on a high-performing PC. It identifies opportunities to measure, analyze, and improve performance in key areas, including battery life, web browsing, and streaming media. OEM, ODM, and IHV partners can also find guidance on developing ...
Manufacturing Windows Engineering Guide | Microsoft Docs
https://docs.microsoft.com/.../manufacture/desktop/manufacturing-windows-engineering-guideOEMs typically provision the RTC in Local Time (LT) for devices shipped with Windows 7. Windows 7 exclusively uses the CMOS time interface to get RTC time, which is interpreted as LT. In Windows 8, we added support for the ACPI Time & Alarm device, but Windows 8 also uses the CMOS RTC, if it is available, and treats the time returned from it as LT.




