❌ – As of 2026, there’s no WhatsApp widget, no Slack widget, no Discord, no Spotify full player (just a limited preview), and no Google services (Calendar, Keep, Gmail). Developers have shown little interest.
It’s worth trying out for weather and calendar. If you hate the news feed, you can turn off the Widgets button entirely via taskbar settings. For most users, third-party apps like Rainmeter (classic desktop widgets) or simply pinning apps to the taskbar remain better alternatives. widgets #windows 11
❌ – Unlike macOS Sonoma/Sequoia or Android, you cannot place widgets on your Windows 11 desktop background. They remain locked inside the pane. For many users, this defeats the purpose. ❌ – As of 2026, there’s no WhatsApp
✅ – Widgets are responsive, load quickly, and respect your system theme (light/dark mode). If you hate the news feed, you can
When Microsoft launched Windows 11, one of its most visible new features was the Widgets panel. Accessed via a dedicated button on the taskbar (Windows key + W), it signaled a return to a concept first popularized by Windows Vista and Windows 7, but with a modern, cloud-driven, AI-infused twist.
✅ – Hovering over the taskbar button (or pressing Win + W) brings it up instantly. It doesn’t cover your full screen like a Start menu search, just a 1/3-width overlay.
❌ – Weather, traffic, news, and synced To-Do items all need you to be signed into a Microsoft Account. Local accounts get a crippled experience.