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This is how the new contextual menus that Microsoft tests in Windows 10 look like and that this developer has managed to reveal

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We are waiting for the second big update of the year for Windows 10 and we haven't tasted the first one yet, although this one aims to be almost a server pack. Windows 10 Sun Valley promises to offer important changes and some, such as thefloating menus, have already been tested

Users who can access the versions that are released within the development channels access improvements before they reach the global version and one of these improvements is the floating menus.An interface that a user managed to activate prematurely

Floating and curved menus

And it is that the new design is there but not in view of all. And one of the first appetizers comes in the form of floating menus. These are contextual menus that are not tied to the application or button with which they were created and that can be located all over the screen.

While Microsoft is already testing them on Windows 10, for now they remain hidden, but not for everyone. A developer named Dan has managed to activate the new skin in the context menu.

To do this you needed to activate the experimental flag JumpListRestyledAc Acrylic, debug ShellExperienceHost.exe and configure JumpListRestyledAc Acrylic to make it visible in Visual Studio.

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With these changes, the appearance that is achieved is the one that appears in the images that accompany the article. A context menu related to Edge and File Explorer>"

The floating menu also reveals another of the changes in the design that will arrive with Sun Valley, as now the corners lose their angles and they become rounded, achieving a much more harmonious and elegant appearance.

It is hoped that this design reaches a large part of the applications integrated in Windows 10 in a way that significantly changes the appearance operating system overview.

Via | Windows Latest

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