windows 11 performance

  1. Windows 11 “Native Apps” Push Explained: Faster Start, Low Latency, Secure Boot

    Microsoft’s latest Windows performance push, discussed in Paul Thurrott’s May 15 mailbag and now surfacing in preview builds, centers on faster Windows 11 app launches, a less web-heavy Start experience, and a broader reckoning with Microsoft’s long, messy dependence on cross-platform app...
  2. WinUI 3 Gets 25% Faster in File Explorer: Microsoft Reduces Shell UI Overhead

    Microsoft said in May 2026 that it has cut the time spent in WinUI 3 code during File Explorer launch by about 25 percent, alongside large reductions in allocations and function calls, as part of a broader effort to make Windows 11 feel faster. That is not just a framework tuning story. It is...
  3. WinUI 3 Performance Push: How Microsoft Plans to Make Windows 11 Feel Fast

    Microsoft has confirmed in May 2026 that it is optimizing WinUI 3 as Windows 11’s forward-looking native interface framework, using File Explorer and Notepad as benchmark apps and reporting double-digit reductions in launch-time allocations, calls, and WinUI execution time. The promise is not...
  4. Windows 11 Low Latency Profile: CPU Boosts to Make Start and Menus Feel Instant

    Microsoft is testing a Windows 11 “Low Latency Profile” that briefly pushes CPU clocks higher during interactive actions such as opening apps, Start, flyouts, and context menus, with early reports on May 7–12, 2026 claiming sizable responsiveness gains in Insider builds. That is the plain story...
  5. Windows 11 “Low Latency Profile” Explained: CPU Boosts, Trust, and Performance

    Microsoft is defending a leaked Windows 11 “Low Latency Profile,” reportedly in Insider testing in May 2026, that briefly raises CPU clock speeds during app launches, Start menu actions, and other interactive tasks to make the operating system feel faster. The company’s argument is simple: this...
  6. Microsoft K2: WinUI 3 Performance Optimizations Target File Explorer and Start

    Microsoft has begun optimizing WinUI 3 itself as part of its Windows 11 performance push, with early File Explorer launch benchmarks showing fewer allocations, fewer transient allocations, fewer function calls, and less time spent inside WinUI code. That is the more important story behind the...
  7. Windows 11 & Xbox Mode: Microsoft’s Small Fixes vs Trust Gap

    Microsoft spent the first full week of May 2026 showing off Windows 11 performance work, a modernized Run dialog, Insider build polish, Xbox Mode experiments, and new controls over local AI model downloads while Windows and Xbox users kept arguing that the company still had not earned back...
  8. Windows 11 Low Latency Profile: CPU Bursts for Snappier Start and App Launches

    Microsoft is testing a Windows 11 “Low Latency Profile” in Insider builds in May 2026 that briefly drives CPU frequency higher when users launch apps, open Start, or trigger key interface actions. The idea is simple enough to sound overdue: stop waiting for the scheduler to notice that the user...
  9. Microsoft Says It’s Doing Windows “Foundational Work” to Win Back Users

    Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told investors on April 29, 2026, that Microsoft is doing “foundational work” to win back fans across its consumer businesses, including Windows performance improvements for lower-memory devices and a more streamlined Windows Update experience. That is not a product...
  10. Windows K2 Explained: Microsoft’s Quality Reset for Faster, Quieter Windows 11

    Microsoft’s rumored Windows K2 initiative arrives at a moment when Windows 11 badly needs a credibility reset. After years of complaints about sluggish surfaces, intrusive prompts, uneven updates, AI clutter, and removed customization options, Microsoft appears to be shifting from “ship more” to...
  11. Fix a Slow Windows 11: Disable Startup Apps, Widgets, OneDrive & Recall

    The original AOL/SlashGear piece is directionally right: Windows 11 can feel heavier than it should, and a handful of built-in features often contribute more to background activity, UI overhead, or privacy anxiety than to day-to-day usefulness. But the strongest version of the argument is not...
  12. Speed Up Windows 11: Disable Startup, Widgets, OneDrive Sync & Visual Effects

    Your Windows 11 PC usually isn’t slow because the operating system is mysteriously “bad” so much as because a handful of always-on conveniences are doing real work in the background. The trouble is that those conveniences are rarely neutral: they can consume CPU cycles, disk activity, memory...
  13. OpenClaw and Windows 11: Microsoft’s Agentic AI for Work Meets Faster OS

    Microsoft is quietly lining up a two-pronged strategy that could reshape both Windows 11 and Microsoft 365: one track aimed at fixing the Windows experience itself, and another aimed at turning Microsoft 365 into a more autonomous AI execution layer. The headline development is OpenClaw, which...
  14. Windows 11 “20/20” Focus: Less Idle RAM and Smaller Installs

    Microsoft may finally be doing something Windows users have begged for years: focusing on the basics. A former Windows leader, Mikhail Parakhin, recently said Microsoft once had an internal “20/20” project aimed at cutting Windows’ idle memory use and fresh-install disk footprint by 20%, and he...
  15. Why Switching to Local LLMs Beats Cloud AI for Everyday Tasks

    I switched to a local LLM for these 5 tasks and the cloud version hasn’t been worth it since. When you pay for an AI subscription every month, you expect reliability, speed, and enough value to justify the bill. But for a growing number of everyday workflows, a local large language model can...
  16. Why Windows 11 Feels Heavy: Background Apps, Indexing, and Copilot

    Windows 11 often feels heavier than it should because Microsoft has steadily turned the desktop into a service platform, not just an operating system. The result is a base install that emphasizes always-on convenience, AI integration, and background automation over a lean first-boot experience...
  17. 4 Windows 11 Settings to Make Your PC Feel Faster (No Hacks)

    Ultimately, Windows 11 can only do so much to squeeze extra speed out of aging hardware, but a few well-chosen settings can still make a noticeable difference. The real trick is understanding that Microsoft defaults most PCs to a balanced experience, not a maximum-performance one, because...
  18. Speed Up Windows 11 by Disabling Background Helpers

    I stopped letting Windows 11 “help” with my files, and for the first time in months my PC actually feels like a computer again—responsive, predictable, and less prone to stutters when I move or open large folders. What changed was not a hardware upgrade but a surgical rollback of several...
  19. Speed Up Windows 11: Fix Slowness From OneDrive and Built-In Features

    Your PC isn’t sluggish because Windows 11 “grew tired” — it’s often because a handful of convenience features are running heavy tasks in the background and competing for CPU, disk I/O, GPU, or network bandwidth. In practice, Five built‑in behaviors stand out as frequent, easily overlooked...
  20. Boost Windows 11 speed with 14 practical fixes and safe upgrades

    If your Windows 11 PC feels sluggish, you’re not imagining it — but the fix is rarely a single magic switch. The 14 quick fixes PCMag laid out provide a practical starting point, and they map well to Windows’ built‑in tools and a handful of safe hardware upgrades; this article expands those tips...