IN Our commitment to Windows quality - "Thank you for holding us to a high standard."

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Written By Pavan Davulur

Hello Windows Insiders,

I want to speak to you directly, as an engineer who has spent his career building technology that people depend on every day. Windows touches more people’s lives than almost any technology on Earth. Every day, we hear from the community about how you experience Windows. And over the past several months, the team and I have spent a great deal of time analyzing your feedback. What came through was the voice of people who care deeply about Windows and want it to be better.

Today, I’m sharing what we are doing in response. Here are some of the initial changes we will preview in builds with Windows Insiders this month and throughout April.

More taskbar customization, including vertical and top positions: Repositioning the taskbar is one of the top asks we’ve heard from you. We are introducing the ability to reposition it to the top or sides of your screen, making it easier to personalize your workspace.

Integrating AI where it’s most meaningful, with craft and focus: You will see us be more intentional about how and where Copilot integrates across Windows, focusing on experiences that are genuinely useful and well‑crafted. As part of this, we are reducing unnecessary Copilot entry points, starting with apps like Snipping Tool, Photos, Widgets and Notepad.

Reducing disruption from Windows Updates: Receiving updates should be predictable and easy to plan around, so we’re giving you more control. This includes the ability to skip updates during device setup to get to the desktop faster, restart or shut down without installing updates and pause updates for longer when needed, all while reducing update noise with fewer automatic restarts and notifications.

Faster and more dependable File Explorer: File Explorer is one of the most used surfaces in Windows. Our first round of improvements will focus on a quicker launch experience, reduced flicker, smoother navigation and more reliable performance for everyday file tasks.
More control over widgets and feed experiences: Widgets should feel helpful and relevant, not distracting or overwhelming. We’re introducing quieter defaults, more control over when and how widgets appear, and improved personalization for the Discover feed.

A simpler, more transparent Windows Insider Program: The Windows Insider Program is how you help shape the future of Windows, and it should be easy to understand what to expect and how to participate. We are implementing changes to make it easier for you to navigate with clearer channel definitions, easier access to new features, higher quality builds, better visibility into how your feedback shapes Windows, and more opportunities to engage directly with us.

Improved Feedback Hub, available starting today: Your feedback is essential to improving Windows, and it should be easy to share and see what others are saying. Today, we’re rolling out the largest update to Feedback Hub yet to our Insiders, with a redesigned experience that makes it faster and easier to submit feedback and engage with the community.

Building on these changes, what follows below is our broader plan and areas of focus for the year to raise the bar on Windows 11 quality. The work is underway. You can expect to see tangible progress that you’ll be able to feel as you preview builds from us throughout the rest of the year.

Last night I had the chance to sit down with a small group of Windows Insiders here in Seattle to listen, to answer questions, and to share more about where we’re headed. The Seattle meetup was the first of several stops our team will be making to engage in person, in more cities around the world, to connect with the Windows community.

Thank you for holding us to a high standard. Windows is as much yours as it is ours. We’re committed to strengthening its foundation and delivering innovation where it matters, for you.

Please keep the feedback coming, to help us shape the future of Windows together.

Best, Pavlan.

Article: https://blogs.windows.com/windows-insider/2026/03/20/our-commitment-to-windows-quality/

Archive: https://archive.md/KL9Zl
 
Too little too late for me. I switched to Linux Mint and couldn’t be happier. My needs are simple, I write and do a little gaming when I get the time. I basically just need a word processor (I use Bibisco) a browser, discord, and steam. At this point there is zero value proposition for Windows. It’s an increasingly worsening user experience even if I were to pay for a license.

What is the incentive for casual PC users to use Windows anymore? In the past, in spite of the bloat, Windows mostly stayed out of my way but now it’s often a frustrating annd convoluted experience to use. When the OS is actively distracting and annoying even someone whose needs are as simple as mine you know you done fucked up. I pity those who are forced to use Windows.
 
I booted my PC an hour ago.
Windows explorer still hasn't loaded, so I'm stuck using Task manager to launch apps.

I'm also multiple years deep developing an app exclusively for Windows so I'll lose bigly if no one uses it.
 
Total horseshit. What's crazy is that I installed server 2008 the other day to play with, and it was a very pleasant computing experience.

On 2008 if I want to join my computer to a domain, I press the start button, type "domain", and press enter. Now I'm at the prompt.
On modern Windows server editions, you have to go to "change this PC's name" which opens up the settings app's home page. Then you have to type "name" to find the actual page you need, then click another button, and then you're at the prompt.

This very simple process is indicative of how MS builds Windows these days. They are complicating shit for no benefit to the user, and making things bloated, slow, and a pain in the ass to do. They gotta take the Terry Davis advice and cut features, not add more.
 
unless you play games all day.
literally me

More taskbar customization, including vertical and top positions: Repositioning the taskbar is one of the top asks we’ve heard from you. We are introducing the ability to reposition it to the top or sides of your screen, making it easier to personalize your workspace.
The sad thing is, there is an entire TEAM dedicated to this. Someone product manager's month is this, and he has an entire slew of retards below him; dev managers, devs, scrum masters, probably 2 or 3 levels of testers, some random retards in the mix maintaining ownership of some dreadfully under-filled design document, 3+ hours of daily calls & they probably still under-budgeted time to the feature. It will fuck up, it will go past deadline, and the curryniggers in charge will scramble and yell at their lessers in an effort to make sure they still hit metrics and get their bonus check at the end of the year. It will deploy broken and turned off, and get patched quietly later.
 
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literally me


The sad thing is, there is an entire TEAM dedicated to this. Someone product manager's month is this, and he has an entire slew of retards below him; dev managers, devs, scrum masters, probably 2 or 3 levels of testers, some random retards in the mix maintaining ownership of some dreadfully under-filled design document, 3+ hours of daily calls & they probably still under-budgeted time to the feature. It will fuck up, it will go past deadline, and the curryniggers in charge will scramble and yell at their lessers in an effort to make sure they still hit metrics and get their bonus check at the end of the year. It will deploy broken and turned off, and get patched quietly later.
I mean it's not like gaming is bad, you're just fucked if you want to play something with a kernel level anti-cheat. Most other games will play just fine from Steam, epic, etc.
 
I like how Excel always opens in a browser. That's a great feature. Whenever I want to do some spreadsheeting, why yes of course I'd like to do it in my browser.

Or when I want to edit a PowerPoint of course I want to open it in the browser by default so it looks like shit on the screen. Very good.
 
Got new one going but put it away for now, present one behaving and don't want to use 11 until I must.
If you have to go to the new machine Massgrave has resources to download and activate W10 LTSC good to 2029. It's really straightforward to do. The most technical thing being drivers that might need manual installation. Edit: it might be worthwhile to make a recovery USB before rolling back a machine to 10 if you wouldn't have easy access to another PC. Alternately find and download networking drivers to USB. You don't want to wind up between the rock and hard place of needing networking drivers and having no way to download them because you have no networking.
 
How Microsoft's elite engineers treated asking for a basic UI feature that has been in the last several versions of windows to return.

1774165014627.png
 
I'm curious what the White-to-Indian ratio is like at Apple. Apple's CEO is white, and I haven't heard as much bad press about Apple as I have about Microsoft (which has a jeet CEO).

Update: Found this website that gives you H-1B stats per company.
Microsoft - https://h1bgrader.com/h1b-sponsors/microsoft-corporation-ew2x79yyk3
Apple - https://h1bgrader.com/h1b-sponsors/apple-inc-6g06vq412q

Microsoft had more than double the amount of H-1Bs that Apple did in 2022. H-1Bs are Chinese too, not just Indian, so I wonder if Apple is hiring the Chinese ones. There's probably another website that breaks down the country stats.

2022 Microsoft:
IMG_3128.jpeg
2022 Apple:
IMG_3127.jpeg
 
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I just want to be able to stop anything ever from stealing focus. There are exactly zero times when I am typing and I want something to pop up and say "Aktually, your cursor is here now." If you really super duper need something to jump up and inform me of something, keep the cursor where it is, and make the window pop to the front with 30% opacity or something.
 
In some way the latest windows uodate fucked up the start button so i couldnt turn off my fucking pc without ctr alt dlt. Unninstaled that shit and it worked again. What the fuck are they doing over there besides putting niggers and street shitter women in charge of xbox
 
I booted my PC an hour ago.
Windows explorer still hasn't loaded, so I'm stuck using Task manager to launch apps.

I'm also multiple years deep developing an app exclusively for Windows so I'll lose bigly if no one uses it.
I had this problem with my old computer. Use task manager to launch windows.exe when this happens.
 
Modern Windows is a real travesty and Linux is no better.
 
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