Microsoft Monday: Xbox One Full HD DVR, Windows 10 Privacy Controls, Minecraft For New Nintendo 3DS

Microsoft Monday: Xbox One Full HD DVR, Windows 10 Privacy Controls, Minecraft For New Nintendo 3DS

“Microsoft Monday” is a weekly column that focuses on all things Microsoft. This week, Microsoft Monday includes details about Minecraft: New Nintendo 3DS Edition, a document scanning feature in the Pix app, new privacy controls coming to Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, PWAs coming to the Windows Store, full HD capture coming to the Xbox One and much more!

Minecraft Is Now Available On Nintendo Handhelds

Mojang

Minecraft for New Nintendo 3DS

Minecraft: New Nintendo 3DS Edition is now available on the Nintendo eShop. Plus a physical version will be coming soon. You can play Minecraft: New Nintendo 3DS Edition on the New 3DS, New 3DS XL and New 2DS XL. But it will not work for the original Nintendo 2DS, 3DS and 3DS XL. The new Minecraft: New Nintendo 3DS Edition has creative mode, survival mode, five skin packs and two texture packs. On the lower touchscreen, you can access the crafting, inventory and mapping tools.

“We want to stress that the game is only on the New Nintendo 3DS series, and we've used all the technical might of the dual-screened wonder machine to give you world sizes of 2016×2016 and 128 blocks high! Multiplayer won't be available at launch but we'll have more to share on the feature later. This edition's closest equivalent is 0.15.4 of Minecraft: Pocket Edition, and we'll be continuing to update from there!” said Mojang in a blog post.

New GIX Building In Bellevue Named After Steve Ballmer

Microsoft is a founding partner of the Global Innovation Exchange (GIX), which is a partnership in science and technology between the University of Washington and Tsinghua University. And Microsoft announced $40 million in financial support when the partnership was announced in June 2015. By providing support, Microsoft was able to decide the name of a new GIX building in Bellevue, Washington. And Microsoft decided to name the building “The Steve Ballmer Building” in honor of former CEO Steve Ballmer.

The Steve Ballmer Building will be welcoming a 44 student batch later this month. And at the grand opening of the Steve Ballmer Building, current CEO Satya Nadella and President Brad Smith were in attendance.

At the building opening, Nadella told a story about when he first met Steve Ballmer in 1992. “Steve stopped by my desk and gave me one of the infamous high fives that only he can do,” said Nadella via GeekWire. “He expressed his immense enthusiasm for me joining Microsoft. I was an entry level guy at that time at Microsoft and here was the CEO walking by my office and sort of giving me this high five. In some sense, I was a changed person after that.” Nadella added that it was a privilege to learn from Ballmer and witness his “contagious ability to create energy in everything he does, the passion with which he approaches all of his work.”

At the event, the GIX also revealed eight members of the new Academic Network: École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, the Indian Institute of Science, Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology, National Taiwan University, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Tecnológico de Monterrey and the University of British Columbia. And there are new members of the Industry Consortium: ARM, Baidu, Boeing HorizonX, and T-Mobile. Plus Hainan Airlines is signed up as a “Valued Partner.”

Microsoft Pix App Can Be Used To Scan Documents

Microsoft

Pix app update

Microsoft has updated the Pix camera app for iOS to detect when photos of whiteboards, business cards and documents are being taken. Then the app uses artificial intelligence to improve the images by cropping the edges, boosting the color tones and sharpening the focus. The algorithms used in the Pix app are similar to what is used in the Office Lens app. And then you can save the files in OneDrive or convert it into editable files for Word and PowerPoint.

“We have data that shows people are taking a lot of whiteboard photos at work, they are doing a lot of document scanning,” said Josh Weisberg, a principal program manager in the Computational Photography Group at Microsoft’s research group in a blog post.

Windows 10 Fall Creators Update To Include New Privacy Prompts For Apps

According to The Verge, Microsoft is adding some privacy improvements to the Windows 10 privacy controls. In the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update, users will be able to see the full privacy statement during setup. And there will be a “learn more” section for every privacy setting during the setup — which will be more understandable. Plus Microsoft will be extending a dialogue box to apps in regards to location-based data. And the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update will show prompts for gaining access to the camera, microphone, calendar, contacts and other personal data.

New Redstone 4 Update Reveals Features Coming To Windows Next Year

Last week, Microsoft rolled out a new version of Redstone 4 (Build 16362) to Windows Insiders — which previews some of the features that will be coming to Windows next year. For those of you in the Skip Ahead part of the Windows Insider’s fast ring, you will notice that several improvements have been added to the Windows 10 boot experience, the Windows Shell, the Edge browser, Narrator and the gaming experience.

The lock screen will now display how you personalized it with details like Windows Spotlight, the Calendar, Cortana status, etc. You can customize the Lock Screen under Personalization within Settings. And you can opt out of the personalization feature within the Privacy section of the Sign-in options.

There are also new choices for controlling Narrator. The Narrator feature speaks highlighted text on the screen. You will be able to select the audio channel for Narrator speech output under the Narrator section of Settings. In that section, there is a new option called “Sounds you hear.”

Microsoft Edge has several new improvements like a bug fix that causes multiple apps to crash if users log into Facebook. In some instances, Edge seems to crash after some users try to pin websites to the Start menu. And the build also fixes a number of bugs in the Windows Shell such as issues that affects Action Center and Start.

Progressive Web Apps To Launch On The Windows Store

According to Windows Central, Microsoft announced at the Edge Web Summit 2017 that it will be bringing Progressive Web Apps (PWA) to Edge next year. Microsoft will actually crawl the web for PWAs and add them to the Windows Store. Microsoft Teams will be one of the first PWAs to arrive in the coming months. PWAs can function offline and it has support for Live Tiles and the Action Center.

Xbox One To Be Able To Capture Streams In Full HD

Soon the standard Xbox One Game DVR will be getting an increase to 1080p from 720p at 30 fps. And you will be able to save those full HD recordings to an external hard drive. This is advantageous because it will save storage on your Xbox One and external hard drives previously only worked for saving games and apps.

Currently, this feature is limited to Alpha Insiders. The full HD recording feature should be fully rolled out later this year.

Microsoft To Fix Windows 10 Game Stutter Problem

There are many Windows 10 users that have reported that they are experiencing a stuttering problem while playing Mass Effect, Overwatch and Rocket League. Fortunately, Microsoft is aware of the issue and is actively working on fixing it.

“We have been analyzing the traces from your feedback and have identified several different problem sources surfacing as stutter in games. We have a fix for one of them in the Windows Insider build that flighted to the ‘Fast' ring (build 16273 and above),” said a Microsoft engineer in the Feedback Hub via Neowin. Build 16273 was released on August 23rd and it seems most likely that a patch will be issued to fix the problem shortly after the Fall Creators Update is released on October.

Beware Of Phishing Scams On LinkedIn

According to researchers at Malwarebytes, hackers are actively running a phishing campaign against LinkedIn users. The hackers are using compromised LinkedIn accounts to send messages containing malicious links to victims in order to steal personal information. So far, the hackers were successful at hijacking several LinkedIn users, including many Premium accounts. The malicious files often appear as a Google Drive link in the form of a shortened URL.

Once the user clicks on the link, they will see a login screen that looks similar to the real version of the website. If the user actually enters their Google, Yahoo! or AOL login information, then that information could be captured by the hacker. It is believed that about 250 people clicked through the phishing link so far.

Google Hires Former Skype Engineers In Stockholm

Back in March, Microsoft announced it would be shutting down the Skype office in Stockholm. Variety learned that Google is hiring a number of those former Skype engineers. And most likely, Google will have those engineers work on its messaging apps such as Duo video chat and the Meet video conferencing service.

Bill And Melinda Gates Release Goalkeepers Report

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has released the first annual Goalkeepers report, which will be published every year until 2030. The Goalkeepers report highlights public health milestones and acknowledges that there is a lot more work to do. On the plus side, there have been significant declines in poverty, childhood mortality and HIV infections. But equality for women and family planning has a lot of room for improvement.

“It’s a huge challenge to reach children in countries in conflict or in remote regions hours away from any infrastructure whatsoever. But it’s doable, and it’s more doable now than ever before,” said Melinda Gates in the report.

Bill Gates said that in the early 2000s, the world made a “huge investment” to address the AIDs crisis. However, the outlook for prevention is concerning because the rate of decline in new infections has been slowing down. AIDs has taken the lives of 35 million people, which Bill Gates says the “worst humanitarian disaster” in his lifetime. “A 10% cut in funding for HIV treatment could cost the lives of an additional 5.6 million people,” said Bill Gates in the report.

Microsoft Says There Are 330 Million Active Monthly Edge Devices

“Microsoft Edge users are active on 330 million monthly devices!” said the Microsoft Edge development team in a tweet. During a webinar, Microsoft also said that this number more than doubled since the Edge summit last year. It is unclear what these numbers are based on because it is unknown what the definition of “active” is in this case. And Microsoft used the words active monthly devices instead of active users.

Xbox One Games Will Not Require A Full Download To Play

According to GameSpot, Microsoft is designing a way to play Xbox One and Xbox One X games while using less hard drive space. The new system is known as Intelligent Delivery and it will essentially split game content into select chunks. And the players will be able to decide which chunks they want to play the game rather than downloading the whole game. This will especially come in handy so users do not have to download substantial 4K digital content for the Xbox One X after buying a game.

Another storage savings opportunity has to do with games with multi-language support. For example, players do not have to download audio assets in languages that they do not want. This is a big storage savings opportunity especially for sports games.

It is unknown when Intelligent Delivery will be arriving. But most likely, it will be released shortly after the Xbox One X launches on November 7th.

Microsoft To Combat Fake News With ‘Fact Check’ Label On Bing

Microsoft is adding “Fact Check” labels to Bing in order to combat fake news. The “Fact Check” labels will inform visitors whether certain news stories have been debunked. This label will either be applied to individual articles or certain websites as a whole.

Microsoft will utilize schema.org ClaimReview markup when scanning pages and stories to determine whether to apply the “Fact Check” labels.

Microsoft Monday: Xbox One Full HD DVR, Windows 10 Privacy Controls, Minecraft For New Nintendo 3DS

Halo is coming to Nintendo Switch… in Minecraft

Halo is coming to Nintendo Switch… in Minecraft

Halo will finally land on a Nintendo platform – in the shape of the Microsoft franchise's Minecraft mash-up pack.

1

The skin and texture pack has been available in Xbox 360 and Xbox One versions of Minecraft for years – but has never been appeared on a rival console.

That will change later this year when Minecraft's new cross-platform version – cunningly just dubbed “Minecraft” – launches.

This iteration of Minecraft is the one Microsoft has dubbed the Better Together Update, which will let Xbox One, Nintendo Switch, Windows 10, Android and iOS, Oculus Rift, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and Samsung Gear VR owners all play together. (Sony turned down PlayStation's invite to the party.)

The Halo Mash-up Pack will be available to all of these platforms.

Minecraft's platform-specific DLC has, until now, been a big question mark. It is listed by Microsoft in a recent blog update as something it is “still working on”.

“Custom skins are awesome, and we know you love them! Getting them to work on consoles requires some work on the platform holders' side to enable things like this,” Microsoft wrote. “We're working with them to get everything in place to enable this in a future update.”

The most high-profile example now Halo is sorted is perhaps the Mario Mash-up Pack available in Minecraft on Wii U and Nintendo Switch. Would Nintendo allow it on other platforms? It seems unlikely… but with Halo appearing on Switch, perhaps anything is possible.

Halo is coming to Nintendo Switch… in Minecraft

Minecraft Built a Colossal Machine Inside the Game to Advertise a Special New Update

Minecraft Built a Colossal Machine Inside the Game to Advertise a Special New Update

In-world advertising is always a fun tactic for gaming brands. And now, Minecraft has gotten into the act, enlisting ad agency 215 McCann to build a giant machine inside the Minecraft world—whose mismatched components serve as marketing for a special update to the popular building game.

For years, the various versions of Minecraft—mobile, Xbox One, PCs—haven’t been compatible with each other. If you build your world on platform, and a friend builds a world on another platform, you can’t visit each other.

For the first time in the history of Minecraft, tens of millions of players will be united across different platforms and devices and able to play together regardless of whether they’re playing on mobile, Xbox One, or Windows 10 PCs.

But yesterday, that all changed. Microsoft explains:

The big day is finally here!

It’s probably the most significant update we’ve made in Minecraft’s recent history – we’re releasing a new version of the game that lets players on Xbox, mobile, VR and Windows 10 play together!

And not only that! It lets you access oodles of player-made goodness on Marketplace! It lets you take that Marketplace goodness from one device to another! It lets you play your Realm on console (for example), hop off, then pick up where you left off on your phone! It lets you join massive servers, with communities numbering in millions of players and eccentric minigames to suit every taste!

The new update to the game is called “Better Together.” And to help market it, 215 McCann built a colossal in-game machine—which players will soon be able to visit—that embodies this sense of togetherness. The “Togetherness Machine” uses claws to grab pieces of the game’s separate platforms and brings them together in a unified village.

The point is to remind players that they can engage with building and breaking cities in real time with other players on different platforms.

Here’s footage of the Togetherness Machine:

It’s great placement, as the cross-platform capability is good news for existing players at least as much, or not more so, as it is for would-be players. The machine will be available in-game in about a month.

CREDITS
Client: Microsoft Xbox
Title: “The Togetherness Machine”
Agency: 215 McCann
Chief Creative Officer: Scott Duchon
Creative Director: Neil Bruce
Copywriter: Andy Holdeman
Art Director: Zach Lepine
Editor: Carson Bell
Producer: Sarah Sweeney
Director of Integrated Production: Alex Spahr
Business Director: Peter Goldstein
Account Director: Drew Porter
Account Executive: Sam Brody
Group Strategy Director: Brian Wakabayashi
Strategy Director: Cassidy Wilber
Communications Strategist: Amy Tucker
Production Company: Blockworks
Recording Studio: One Union Recording
Mixer: Joaby Deal
Original Music: Robot Repair

Minecraft Built a Colossal Machine Inside the Game to Advertise a Special New Update

Minecraft is getting a huge update with new items, achievements, and cross-platform play

Minecraft is getting a huge update with new items, achievements, and cross-platform play

Despite being a place of infinite wonder and joy, Minecraft has, for the most part, had a segmented player base. If you’ve been playing on PC, playing alongside those on Xbox One has been impossible. Until now. A new update is allowing players on four different platforms to play together at once.

The Better Together update is one of the largest updates for Minecraft in its history, primarily due to the size of this undertaking. Anyone on Xbox One, PC, mobile, or virtual reality versions of Minecraft will now be able to play together in online servers. Those playing on the Nintendo Switch can expect to receive this update this winter, adding yet another group to the massive pile of Minecraft builders. PS4 isn't on the books right now, unfortunately, although the Minecraft developers are talking to Sony about it. More on that in the Better Together FAQ.

Also in this update are new features, tweaks, and bugs. Highlights of those features are:

  • Stained Glass, Fireworks (with Elytra boost!), Parrots, Banners, Armor Stands, Jukebox and music discs, Recipe Book, and Book & Quill items
  • New world start options: Starting Map; Bonus Chest; Trust Players
  • New game rules: Show Coordinates; TNT Explodes; Natural Regeneration
  • Player permissions
  • Zombie Villager spawn egg
  • Expanded Xbox Live multiplayer world settings
  • New loading screens with funny and helpful tips
  • How to Play screen
  • New achievements
  • Realms invite links
  • Mash-up Packs and Texture Packs will now decorate the main menu and in-game HUD

The full list of features tweaks are on the official announcement, while the bug fixes are just labelled as being “too many to mention.” Apparently, llamas could previously turn their head backwards while you ride them before this update, though, which is a terrifying thought.

For those of you on PC – you'll have to be playing on the version of Minecraft simply called ‘Minecraft'. With this update, the previously-named Minecraft Bedrock Edition no longer exists, there now simply being Minecraft and Minecraft Java. It's a little complicated, but: Minecraft is the version that's the same across most platforms, and the one you have to use to get access to the Better Together update.

Minecraft is getting a huge update with new items, achievements, and cross-platform play

The big ‘Minecraft’ cross-platform update is live, but not on Switch

The big ‘Minecraft’ cross-platform update is live, but not on Switch

The Better Together update brings the biggest set of changes to hit Minecraft in years, expanding the Community Marketplace, streamlining access to third-party servers and uniting the game across platforms — and it's all live today. Well, most of it is.

Better Together is rolling out across Xbox One, Windows 10, virtual-reality and mobile versions of Minecraft right now, but it won't hit the Switch until later this year. Microsoft's original plan, which it unveiled at E3 in June, was to launch Better Together on Switch at the same time as the other platforms (hence the title of the update).

PlayStation 4 was never part of the equation for this initial rollout.

“We just flat-out couldn't get those two completely in sync,” Microsoft Studios Corporate Vice President Matt Booty says.

Microsoft, it should be noted, bought Minecraft in 2014 for $2.5 billion, quickly folding the franchise into its lineup of first-party Xbox studios. Xbox One and Windows platforms are the official home of Minecraft, so it makes sense that today's update definitely includes those devices.

The Switch version will see the Better Together upgrade this year — in time for the holiday season, according to Booty. It's just a matter of working out last-minute details, apparently.

“There's no policy or real technical considerations there,” he says. “Nintendo's been a fantastic partner to work with on this.”

Booty says the same about Microsoft's partnership with Sony, though don't expect the PS4 version of Minecraft to work with Xbox or Switch editions anytime soon. Microsoft and Sony are talking about a partnership, but there are no concrete plans for Better Together to hit PS4, Booty explains.

“I know it might seem simple from the outside looking in, and I can certainly understand that from a game player's point of view,” he says. “From our point of view, on Minecraft, Sony is working with us on this. We are in conversations with them. I think it's important for us to be respectful to some of the concerns and challenges that Sony is thinking about as we figure out how this could possibly work.”

This is a common refrain on the issue of cross-platform play — Sony is the lone holdout, reluctant to open the PlayStation ecosystem to other platforms. Meanwhile, Microsoft and Nintendo have shown more interest in this space: Rocket League players on Xbox One and Switch are able to play together, for instance. Technically, Rocket League is also playable among PS4 and Xbox One or Switch, but Sony doesn't want to enable the ability, Psyonix Vice President Jeremy Dunham told Engadget at E3. He said cross-platform play was a matter of life or death for his game, and the team frequently broached the subject with representatives at Sony.

“There have been slight variations on how it's been presented to us, but essentially it's the same answer,” Dunham said. “It's ‘not right now' or it's ‘something we'll consider.' That's paraphrasing, but there hasn't been any movement.”

And then there's the curious case of Fortnite. Just this past weekend, PS4 and Xbox One players found themselves in games together, and the entire escapade was caught live on Twitch. A spokesperson for Fortnite said the cross-platform capabilities were due to “a configuration issue” that was quickly fixed, but the brief moment of console compatibility only served to remind players of everything that could be. Everything, like playing Minecraft across consoles.

“I certainly don't want to speak for them, but it absolutely remains our goal to want to bring PlayStation into the mix with this,” Booty says. “I feel confident we'll figure out a way to make that work. I also just want to really state that Sony is being a good partner with us. We're in conversations with them, we're working on this together.”

So far, just one game, Rocket League, is playable across Xbox One and Switch, and Minecraft is on its way to becoming the second. The cross-console ecosystem is in its infancy. Booty sees Microsoft as a leader in this space, just as the company has been in years (and console generations) past.

“It was a game like Halo that really proved you could bring a first-person shooter over to console,” Booty says. “It was Halo that first really led the way and helped people figure out a lot of how multiplayer was going to work over the internet and not just over LAN. This is a similar situation. I think the Minecraft team is proud to be one of the first games figuring out exactly how this is going to work and kind of leading the way.”

Minecraft birthday party with bouncy castles

If Minecraft, one of the most popular games in the history of humanity, can work across consoles, any game should be able to — eventually, at least.

“That sets the stage for what could possibly then become a broader approach,” Booty says. “Right now we're very focused on figuring this out with Minecraft. You gotta start somewhere, right?”

The big ‘Minecraft' cross-platform update is live, but not on Switch

The Nintendo Switch has slowly turned into a fantastic portable multiplayer machine

The Nintendo Switch has slowly turned into a fantastic portable multiplayer machine

Do you remember the video Nintendo used to show off the Switch for the first time? The one where hip 20-somethings would bring their Switch consoles everywhere, breaking them out at parties for some local multiplayer action, or playing Mario Kart in the back of a van en route to a real go-kart course. It seemed more aspirational than practical at the time. Sure, the Switch was a machine designed with flexibility, but who would actually use it like that? Turns out, I would. And one of the reasons is the steady stream of solid multiplayer games Nintendo has been releasing since the console debuted back in March.

Local multiplayer has always been a core part of the pitch for Nintendo’s new platform. It’s meant, at least in part, to be a device that you can carry around and use for impromptu gaming sessions with friends. The included Joy-Con controllers are generally serviceable, if not ideal, for two-player action in most games. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe was the first major release to make good on this concept, though it was preceded by a pair of launch titles, the quirky (and adorable) puzzle game Snipperclips and mini-game collection 1-2-Switch.

Since then, Nintendo has released a handful of titles that further flesh out the lineup. Chief among them are the colorful fighter Arms, which launched in June, and pokémon battler Pokkén Tournament DX, out today. And while paint shooter Splatoon 2 is largely an online-focused experience, it does offer the ability to link up multiple systems for local play.

Both Mario Kart and Pokkén are updated versions of games that originally appeared on the Wii U, Nintendo’s previous console. This makes them perfect examples of how much the Switch hardware can change the experience. Both games were already pretty solid from a design standpoint, and the Switch ports don’t add all that much in that respect. Mario Kart features a few new characters and some useful accessibility features, while Pokkén includes some additional fighters and a handful of game modes. But fundamentally they’re the same games.

What the Switch versions really offer, though, is the ability to easily play these games with your friends, on your own terms. Pokkén, in particular, is a game that doesn’t stand on its own as something you’d want to play much by yourself. It originated as an arcade game, and is at its best when you’re furiously battling against someone sitting right beside you.

The nature of the Switch means it’s much easier to have that kind of experience — there are simply more ways to play. With a console like the Wii U, playing with a friend meant you both had to be sitting in a specific room at a specific time. The Switch is much more flexible. You can play in the living room, on a train, or basically anywhere. It doesn’t have to be something you plan out in advance. It also doesn’t hurt that games like Arms, Mario Kart, and Pokkén Tournament are designed to be easy to get into.

Rocket League Nintendo Switch
Rocket League.

This flexibility also extends to games not made by Nintendo. In fact, a number of ports of third-party games have added multiplayer functionality specifically with the Switch in mind. Venerable adventure game Cave Story was recently updated with a two-player co-op mode that’s exclusive to the Switch, while the ubiquitous Minecraft has a perfectly suited split-screen mode. Cars-meets-soccer game Rocket League is also making a belated debut on the platform. When it does arrive, it will include a two-player split-screen mode that, on the surface, seems like an ideal fit.

There’s also a lot to look forward to on the multiplayer front. An expanded version of Snipperclips, complete with all-new content is coming on November 10th, while the Switch version of FIFA 18 will include split Joy-Con multiplayer support. Even the tentpole release Super Mario Odyssey will feature rudimentary co-op. Then there are the games launching next year and beyond, like the four-player Kirby Star Allies and the inevitable Switch version of Super Smash Bros.

Most of these games would be just fine on another platform. But what the Switch offers is a level of freedom and spontaneity that’s not possible on a traditional console, or even a portable device like the 3DS. At any point, you can pull a Switch out of your bag and start racing on Rainbow Road — and look like you’re in a Nintendo commercial in the process.

The Nintendo Switch has slowly turned into a fantastic portable multiplayer machine