Microsoft will FINALLY let users disable the MSN feed in Windows 11’s widgets board later this year

Users will be able to just show widgets instead of the news feed.

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What you need to know

What you need to know

Microsoft announced during itsBuild 2023developer keynote on May 24 that it will finally allow users to disable the Microsoft News feed that’s found in Windows 11’s widgets board via an update coming later this year, finally offering a layout that only shows your widgets.

Currently, the widgets board onWindows 11doesn’t have an option to turn off the MSN feed, meaning your widgets are mixed with news and video stories pulled in from the Microsoft News website. While you can hide stories you don’t like, you’ve never been able to outright remove the news feed.

But that will change later this year when Microsoft rolls out an update to Windows 11 that enables a new “widgets only” layout, removing the MSN feed entirely. Users will be able to choose between different layouts, some with and without the MSN feed present.

Microsoft has been working on big updates for the widgets panel on Windows 11 in recent months.In the latest Windows 11 feature drop, the company has introduced a new UI for the widgets board that separates the widgets from the MSN feed, and it looks like we’ll be getting more layout options later this year.

Windows Central also understands that Microsoft is working on a feature that will allow users topin widgets directly onto the desktop, bypassing the need to open the widgets board first. This is likely a feature planned for thenext major version of the Windowsplatform, currently targeting a fall 2024 release window.

The company justannounced a bunch of new features in the works for Windows 11, many of which are expected to ship as part of Windows' annual feature update in the fall. There’s a new AI assistant, support for RGB peripherals, in-box support for archive formats such as 7zip and RAR, and much more.

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Zac Bowden is a Senior Editor at Windows Central. Bringing you exclusive coverage into the world of Windows on PCs, tablets, phones, and more. Also an avid collector of rare Microsoft prototype devices! Keep in touch onTwitterandThreads