Windows 10 “Home Hub” feature will take on Amazon Echo and more
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2017, 2018 Updates will offer shared workspaces and a Cortana serving multiple people.
Peter Bright
Microsoft is going to make the Windows 10 PC a
more family-focused device, taking on Amazon's Echo and Google Home as
it does, according to the latest reports and rumors about forthcoming
features.
The story starts with Twitter user Walking Cat poking around preview builds
and finding reference to a feature named Home Hub, which appears to
take the multi-user features of Windows 10 in a new direction. In
addition to individual per-user accounts on shared machines, Home Hub
will enable a shared Family Account and Family Desktop. This account
will have its own calendar, music, pictures, and other resources that
are used by and shared between several different people.
Mary Jo Foley tied that discovery
to job postings from November, where Microsoft outlined its desire to
build family-oriented sharing features for Windows and its desire to
compete with Google, Amazon, Apple, and AT&T
Sources speaking to Windows Central
added a ton of extra meat to the Home Hub skeleton. While a little
groundwork has been laid already (such as the ability to use Cortana
from the lock screen, which was added in this summer's Anniversary
Update), the major Home Hub features will be shipping in updates
codenamed Redstone 3 (late 2017) and Redstone 4 (2018).
According to Windows Central, the family
account will act as a kind of hybrid. It will show any user the shared,
family-wide stuff but authenticate in using Windows Hello biometrics
(which, for facial recognition, requires nothing more than sitting down
in front of the PC). The shared data will be extended to also show
private calendars and data. Sign off and the private stuff will be
hidden away, leaving only the shared data. This ability to create
family-enabled apps with the split level of privacy and authentication
will be offered to developers, too.
A new family welcome screen, showing
appointments, sticky notes, to-do lists, and similar shared information
will be included, so even a locked machine will become more useful.
A key family-enabled app will be Cortana.
Microsoft's digital personal assistant will have a family mode,
currently referred to as "FamTana" internally, that will be able to
serve non-personal requests such as weather lookups and news headlines.
It will also be able to access shared calendars, play shared music, and
so on. As with other family-enabled apps, authenticated users will also
be able to use their private data with her.
With the Home Hub features, Windows 10 will
also become a smart device hub. It'll be possible to register smart
devices like lights and locks with the PC and control them centrally,
including Cortana integration. Open Connectivity Foundation and Open
Translators to Things devices will be supported out of the box.
The big point of differentiation between
Microsoft's plans and the capabilities of, say, Alexa on the Amazon Echo
is that Microsoft is still envisaging a conventional PC (albeit a
conventional PC with biometric authentication and microphone arrays) as
the hub for all your activity. What doesn't
appear to be in the works is a headless, screenless, pure-voice device.
This has some implications. It makes using Home Hub more expensive,
especially if you want to cover more rooms—adding a new all-in-one PC is
going to cost more than adding a new Amazon Echo, because the PC has a
lot more hardware.
It also feels like it could fall foul of the
same awkwardness that Cortana suffers from in Windows 10. Speaking to
Alexa is natural, because there's no other way of using Alexa; she's
trapped inside a box with only a microphone and a speaker to communicate
with. But Cortana has a PC with a screen and a mouse and a keyboard, so
there's always this pressure to just... not use her and stick with the
conventional input and output schemes. Alexa has to be designed so that
she understands natural speech patterns and provides all the information
you need using the spoken word; Cortana doesn't have that same design
discipline. After all, she can always fall back to making you look at
stuff on the screen.
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