Redstone 3 already works as a Build in 15141 but we still have to wait to test its new features
Redstone 3 is the next great adventure that awaits us within the Windows environment. A compilation that will arrive in autumn coinciding with the fall of the leaf and the arrival of bad weather. But if you are very impatient with this news, you will surely like it and it is that you may not have to wait so long to get your hands on the news that it will send us.
With the Creators Update already outlined and about to arrive with the flowers, all eyes are turning, at least in the longer term, to Redstone 3, the new compilation that is already giving us long teeth with novelties such as the new interface that for now we know as Project NEON.
The truth is that in theory and I say in theory since we are talking about the release of the public version, there is still a lot to know about what Redstone 3 will be like. happens with the Builds?
Well, apparently since Microsoft they have done their homework very well and they would already have a Redstone 3 Build ready that would be ready to arrive in not too long the members of the Insiders Program in their most advanced rings.
Specifically, it would be Build 15141, which for now is being tested within the private sphere of the Insider Program in order to polish any bugs it may have and ensure a minimum quality before being announced. Therefore and apparently it exists, but for now in an embryonic stage of general development.
Hopefully it won't be until some time later with the release of the Creators Update, when we see the first Redstone-based Builds 3. Thus, from May we could begin to see how Builds arrive with touches of the new compilation so that, as has happened with the Creators Update, it is tested before its release in the fall.
It is clear that we will see a busy end of the year for Microsoft, with open fronts in different fields such as consoles (the arrival of Project Scorpio is raising conflicting opinions) or the fight in the systems mobile operatives boosted with the arrival of x86 applications on ARM processors.
Via | Buildfeed