New Windows 10 build adds GPU temp monitoring, desktop renaming, and Settings updates

Users have been waiting for the first significant builds of the upcoming Windows 10 20H1 feature release to drop, and build 18963 is just that. It offers improvements to the Task Manager, Settings, Windows Search, and even your account picture. 

None of the new features should be considered barn-burners, but we haven’t seen this breadth of variety very often with the upcoming 20H1 release. (While the 20H1 release, due in the spring of 2020, is the “feature release,” Microsoft has said before that the 19H2 release due this fall will be built around optimizations and bug fixes.)

Here’s a list of what’s new, starting off with a feature designed for PC enthusiasts:

GPU temperature comes to Task Manager

While you may already monitor your GPU temps via some form of third-party utility, the capability is now being built right into Windows. Along with a number of other capabilities already built into Task Manager (monitoring your CPU utilization is a popular choice, along with tracking Wi-Fi and networking bandwidth) you’ll now see your GPU temperature, if your system supports it. You’ll find it in the Performance tab.

windows 10 gpu temp settings Microsoft

You can check our how hot your (discrete) GPU is getting via the Performance tab.

Unfortunately, Task Manager doesn’t seem to support your CPU temperature yet, but it’s likely that will be added down the road. You’ll need a graphics driver that supports version 2.4 (or higher) of WDDM. Unfortunately, temperatures are provided only in Celsius for now. 

Rename your virtual desktops

While many people don’t actually use Windows’ virtual desktops capability (leading Microsoft to repurpose it to Timeline), one feature has been long overdue: the ability to rename the desktops, so that you can at least mentally organize them into work and play, or at least different desktops for different tasks. Simply open Task View by pressing Win+Tab or by pressing the Task View key, then click the name of the desktop to change it.

The names will persist through a reboot cycle, Microsoft says.

windows 10 optional features Microsoft

The Windows optional features now have more control options from the Settings menu.

Microsoft’s server-side Microsoft Search improves

Microsoft has also made several improvements to Microsoft Search. The improvements will work best when your PC is connected to the Internet, and it can filter your searches through to the cloud. Here’s a short summary: