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Microsoft backtracks on deprecating the 39-year-old Windows Control Panel | Microsoft has either backtracked or clarified its language to remove the note about Control Panel being deprecated

Last week, Microsoft mentioned in a support document that it was formally deprecating Windows’ 39-year-old Control Panel applets. But following widespread reporting of the change, Microsoft has either backtracked or clarified its language to remove the note about Control Panel being deprecated in favor of the Settings app. Here’s what the original post said, as also preserved by the Internet Wayback Machine (emphasis ours):

“The Control Panel is a feature that’s been part of Windows for a long time. It provides a centralized location to view and manipulate system settings and controls,” the support page explains. “Through a series of applets, you can adjust various options ranging from system time and date to hardware settings, network configurations, and more. The Control Panel is in the process of being deprecated in favor of the Settings app, which offers a more modern and streamlined experience.

The current version of the page has changed that last sentence considerably. It now says that “many of the settings in Control Panel are in the process of being migrated to the Settings app, which offers a more modern and streamlined experience.

It’s not clear whether this reflects a policy change or just a clarification of language. We’ve asked Microsoft whether it has changed plans to deprecate the Control Pane or if the original version of the support page was just incorrect in the first place, and we’ll update if we receive a response.

turkalino ,
@turkalino@lemmy.yachts avatar

The updated language is what they’ve been saying since a couple years after Windows 10 came out. This story just went back to not being news lol

daggermoon , (edited )

I don’t even use Windows anymore and I cringe at the thought of being forced to use the Settings app over Control Panel.

ayyy ,

As an occasional windows user I was trying to come up with a counter-example for you but I couldn’t think of one lol.

Feathercrown ,

Knew it. They won’t dare invalidate the 35-year-old government PDFs instructing people on how to enable their firewall or whatever.

flop_leash_973 ,

Someone found something that still depends on the control panel that will not be easily moved or done away with I bet.

tias ,

More like, the devs already knew but some middle manager promised they would remove it without understanding the ramifications, and now they’ve been schooled.

reddig33 ,

Pathetic leadership.

homesweethomeMrL ,

lol they’re all like “oh the control panel is old and broken, we’re totally taking it to modern streamlined -ville”

MSFT deveolper: “Uh, that modern streamlined -ville is the control panel. It’s the same code. It even has the same name. People will check you know.”

“Upon further reflection, what we meant was . . . “

nucleative ,

I for one would be fine going back to the ini files of win 3.1

catloaf ,

It’s still better than the registry. Or worse, some newfangled management abstraction that tries to be helpful but just makes everything opaque. Looking at you, systemd.

Archer ,

Systemd for Windows with the Windows Registry as a backend

DaddleDew ,

They’ll just do it anyway quietly later on

RickRussell_CA ,
@RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world avatar

Then they would have to remove the various hooks in the Settings app that actually call and open the Control Panel.

How many are there? I can think of several (advanced mouse settings, advanced network settings, printer properties, date & time has a callout back to the old panel…)

Windows 10 came out nine years ago, so they don’t seem in any particular rush.

Hawke ,

Sound is in there too. The one that annoys me is the printer settings being under “Bluetooth” instead of “printers”.

MyTurtleSwimsUpsideDown ,

Lol. I think they claimed that Settings was going to replace Control Panel when Windows 8 came out. It’s been 12 years. 😂

It’s long overdue for MS to shit or get off the pot. Either allocate some resources to this pet project or give up the pretense that it is ever going to happen.

ayyy ,

The excellent built in audio compressor called Reduce Loud Noises is buried in the Enhancements audio Control Panel.

RobotToaster ,
@RobotToaster@mander.xyz avatar

“deprecated” doesn’t usually mean removed, just that new things shouldn’t use it because they may remove it at some unspecified time in the future. Some programming languages have had deprecated features for over a decade.

2xsaiko ,
@2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

the Settings app, which offers a more modern and streamlined experience.

tl: “modern” means “less usable UI” and “streamlined” means “less functionality”

breakingcups ,

Less functionality as in “unable to open more than one panel at a time”

I stg Windows, every new UI is aggravating half-baked drivel.

(obligatory remark about the fact I mostly use Linux here)

2xsaiko ,
@2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I’d classify that as under “less usable UI”. There’s two different concepts in interface design: utility (i.e. can it do what you need it to) and usability (i.e. how easy and effective to use is it).

With utility/“less functionality” I was thinking about people saying they have to still open Control Panel because the “new” Settings still can’t do everything Control Panel can do after what, 12 years?

darkevilmac ,
@darkevilmac@lemmy.zip avatar

I think this is likely to be what I saw others mention on earlier posts. Lots of enterprise or business software that hooks into the control panel.

So even if Microsoft does migrate all the Windows options over to settings there’s still going to be software that uses control panel to manage their own settings.

Unless Microsoft is going to make it possible to hook into the new settings app just as easily then they’re going to have to keep the old one around even though they keep crippling it.

FierySpectre ,

They’re probably just going to disable it for manual access and add a regkey that you can add to regain access. (They’ve done the same for other ‘deprecated’ features)

darkevilmac ,
@darkevilmac@lemmy.zip avatar

Yeah it’s annoying as hell, wish they’d stop killing their own OS. I honestly think the first few builds of Windows 11 were a decent step in the right direction in terms of actually getting everything feeling relatively cohesive again. But the AI push and everything that happened right after release has started to let the rot creep back in again.

Next GPU I get I’m just going to run Linux as my main OS and have a VM with a GPU pass through so I can stop losing my mind.

bizarroland ,

I've been thinking about testing that myself. There's a few things that are just a little more intuitive for me on Windows versus Linux, and for the handful of games that prefer Windows configuration or makes it easier to game on Windows might be handy to have a way to access Windows without it being my daily driver.

Then again, I have multiple computers and I already run Linux on my laptop which is the primary device that I use, I'm just talking about my game / audio workstation.

NegativeLookBehind ,
@NegativeLookBehind@lemmy.world avatar

Backtracks, for now

Aggravationstation ,

Yea, like Recall. It’s coming. They’ll just do it silently without any backlash because people will be talking about the new pile of shit Microsoft is doing and also arguing like “no, they cancelled that, here’s the link” to an article from 6 months ago.

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