The best Windows 11 tool you aren’t using (but should) can now upgrade itself

Upgrade the tool that you can use to upgrade everything else.

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What you need to know

What you need to know

My favorite tool on Windows 11 is theWindows Package Manager. I’ve written before aboutWindows Package Manager is so good I won’t use anything else, but it continues to get better all the time.

The latest goodness, as communicated byMicrosoft’s Demitrius Nelon, is that the Windows Package Manager can now upgrade itself.

✅ winget upgrade wingetWinGet can now upgrade itself. Only stable versions will be published this way until we have support for channels.December 5, 2023

The addition of this feature also means that thewinget upgrade –allcommand will now incorporate Windows Package Manager if there is a new version of the App Installer available.

Only stable versions will be published this way for the time being, since there’s currently no support for channels. But that said, reading between the lines, it would seem that support for channels is something planned for the tool.

The best Windows 11 tool you should be using

The best Windows 11 tool you should be using

The number one reason I recommend the Windows Package Manager to anyone who will listen is speed. It’sso fast. Fast to find your apps, fast to install them, you can set it going and mostly leave it alone.

Sure, the Microsoft Store can do that to some degree, but if you install as much software from outside the Store as I do, Windows Package Manager is the way to do it. This quote from my previous piece linked above demonstrates how it’s fit into my workflow.

Ultimately it comes down to speed. I’m someone who uses the keyboard for everything where possible. I spend my days typing, and it’s a far better workflow to launch the terminal, type in a short command or two, and be out of there again than go to websites or get into the Store.

The terminal doesn’t have to be scary, and Windows Package Manager is actually very simple when you learn the basic commands. There’s a built-in help option to guide you, but trust me when I say it doesn’t take long to get the hang of.

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The beauty is that because Windows Package Manager doesn’t actually host the packages itself, as you would find on a Linux package manager, you’re essentially just downloading your apps from source. So instead of going to a website, downloading a .exe file, opening it, running through the installer, you can tell Windows Package Manager to do it for you. The same applies to upgrading all those apps, you can do them all at once with a single command, wherever they came from.

And now you don’t even need to manually update the Package Manager tool itself, it’s getting closer and closer to being perfect. Hit theGitHub repoto get yourself rolling for the first time and give it a try!

Richard Devine is a Managing Editor at Windows Central with over a decade of experience. A former Project Manager and long-term tech addict, he joined Mobile Nations in 2011 and has been found on Android Central and iMore as well as Windows Central. Currently, you’ll find him steering the site’s coverage of all manner of PC hardware and reviews. Find him on Mastodon atmstdn.social/@richdevine