Windows 10 version 1903, also known as 19H1 and April 2019 Update, is projected to go live for production devices later this month with a series of new features and major improvements.
One of the under-the-hood tweaks that Microsoft hasn’t detailed, however, concerns File Explorer, the default file manager that comes pre-installed in Windows 10.
Beginning with Windows 10 version 1903, new windows in File Explorer are launched in a separate process, so if you work with multiple folders in their own windows, you will end up with multiple processes belonging to the same file manager running at the same time.
This implementation has one major benefit: if one of the windows crashes or stops responding, force-closing it doesn’t affect the other windows of the file manager. This is similar to how browser tabs work in Google Chrome, wh... (read more)
One of the under-the-hood tweaks that Microsoft hasn’t detailed, however, concerns File Explorer, the default file manager that comes pre-installed in Windows 10.
Beginning with Windows 10 version 1903, new windows in File Explorer are launched in a separate process, so if you work with multiple folders in their own windows, you will end up with multiple processes belonging to the same file manager running at the same time.
This implementation has one major benefit: if one of the windows crashes or stops responding, force-closing it doesn’t affect the other windows of the file manager. This is similar to how browser tabs work in Google Chrome, wh... (read more)
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