The beta channel, once a product is in production is slow because it is an early release of the next monthly feature production version. They are under tighter control than dev because of this, so there is more process involved. I believe you will see them maybe once a month as an early release of the monthly feature update, sometime more if there were fixes to be tested. You might as well be on the release preview channel.
as @cereberus said. I think it is just an early look at what is going to be released whereas the Dev is all the new things. It's a matter of how stable you want your version as to whether you pick dev or beta. because beta is newer things it gets more updates to correct it. That is my opinion
as @cereberus said. I think it is just an early look at what is going to be released whereas the Dev is all the new things. It's a matter of how stable you want your version as to whether you pick dev or beta. because beta is newer things it gets more updates to correct it. That is my opinion
MS changed the Fast Ring (now Dev Channel) policy some years ago and now release smaller upgrades more frequently.
The upshot of this is the builds are generally a lot more stable than they used to be but it is more annoying doing updates so frequently. Sometimes I skip and update or two if the update has useless rubbish like another five million emoticons or a red icon is now blue etc.
The Beta channel is intended to provide semi stable builds as work progresses, unlike the dev build which can be a lot more buggy. Early in the Beta there simply are not a lot of changes that are at the appropriate quality levels. You will find that as the final release gets closer, the Beta builds tend to become more frequent.
64GB (Waiting for warranty replacement of another 64GB for 128GB total)
Graphics Card(s)
No GPU - Built-in Intel Graphics
Sound Card
Integrated
Monitor(s) Displays
HP Envy 32
Screen Resolution
2560 x 1440
Hard Drives
1 x 1TB NVMe SSD
1 x 2TB NVMe SSD
1 x 4TB NVMe SSD
3 x 512GB 2.5" SSD
1 x 4TB 2.5" SSD
5 x 8TB Seagate Barracuda HDD
PSU
Corsair HX850i
Case
Corsair iCUE RGB 5000X mid tower case
Cooling
Noctua NF-S12A chromax.black.swap case fans (Qty. 7) & Home Computer Specifications, Configuration, and Usage Notes General Specifications ASUS Prime Z590-A motherboard, serial number M1M0KC222467ARP Intel Core i7-11700K CPU (11th Gen Rocket Lake / LGA 1200 Socket) 128GB Crucial Ballistix RGB DDR4 3200 MHz DRAM (4 x 32GB) Corsair iCUE RGB 5000X mid tower case Noctua NH-D15 chromax.black CPU cooler Noctua NF-S12A chromax.black.swap case fans (Qty. 7) & Corsair LL-120 RGB Fans (Qty. 3)
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Corsair K70 Max RGB Magnetic Keyboard
Mouse
Logitech MX Master 3
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1Gb Up / 1 Gb Down
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Edge
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Other Info
The five 8TB drives and three 512GB SSDs are part of a DrivePool using StableBit DrivePool software. The three SSDs are devoted purely to caching for the 8TB drives. All of the important data is stored in triplicate so that I can withstand simultaneous failure of 2 disks.
Networking: 2.5Gbps Ethernet and WiFi 6e
Operating System
Win11 Pro 23H2
Computer type
Laptop
Manufacturer/Model
Lenovo ThinkBook 13x Gen 2
CPU
Intel i7-1255U
Memory
16 GB
Graphics card(s)
Intel Iris Xe Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek® ALC3306-CG codec
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13.3-inch IPS Display
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WQXGA (2560 x 1600)
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2 TB 4 x 4 NVMe SSD
PSU
USB-C / Thunderbolt 4 Power / Charging
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Buttonless Glass Precision Touchpad
Keyboard
Backlit, spill resistant keyboard
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1Gb Up / 1Gb Down
Browser
Edge
Antivirus
Windows Defender
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WiFi 6e / Bluetooth 5.1 / Facial Recognition / Fingerprint Sensor / ToF (Time of Flight) Human Presence Sensor