Microsoft DOS and then Windows have gone through several evolutions over the years. When Windows first arrived, it was a User Interface (UI) shell on top of DOS. Then Windows 95 absorbed DOS to create something new — but didn’t include security. Windows 8 tried to absorb the smartphone experience, failed, but essentially made third-party anti-virus software obsolete.
Windows 10 took security a few steps farther (and integrated a better digital assistant, Cortana, that few people ever used). And now, with Windows 11, Microsoft has begun to integrate hardware security without integrating PC firmware (BIOS). Due to issues with the move to Windows 11, I think the next integration will be BIOS.
The significant advantage here would be getting to a single control panel that deals with all PC settings instead of two of the damn things (with only one available during boot). As we move to ever more aggressive central management of PCs, having a deeper integration between the BIOS and the Windows should improve remote control and management — and improve our ability to diagnose problems remotely without the user getting involved.
You could also have a built-in OS utility that would automatically optimize BIOS settings; the OS already knows what hardware you have, so it might as well move to the next step and advise you how to improve performance or security; better yet, it should automatically optimize your hardware in the background, giving you access to more of the hardware features you bought. Finally, Microsoft would be taking another step toward assuring a good user experience when upgrading by eliminating the problems many of us had with Windows 11.
Microsoft has taken more and more control over the user experience over time. It started with very little; an OEM could provide even the user interface back in the 1990s. These days, Microsoft controls most aspects of the PC user experience — except for the BIOS. That lack of control caused a number of the initial Windows 11 reviews to spin negative and created considerable frustration with users. I expect the company’s next step is to better integrate the OS with the BIOS to improve the user experience even by providing users with more robust control over their PC’s performance from within Windows. This kind of change doesn’t need to wait until Windows 12, either. It would significantly improve the initial Windows 11 upgrade experience and likely improve centralized Windows management and control for IT or PC services providers.