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
 
Read: corporate customers are saying "fuck right off" when Microsoft comes around talking about upgrading to Windows Shitbox edition.
 
The jeets fear the SteamOS.
They also fear Apple's new $600 laptop. Microsoft has had the sub $1K laptop market cornered for decades. My guess, Dell, HP, and Lenovo told Microsoft they better get their shit together with Windows 11, or else they'll start shipping computers with Linux. The RAM crisis doesn't help. Windows 11 is a memory hog and I doubt it could run on 8GB of RAM as well as macOS or most Linux distros can.
 
Jeet or no Jeet, I'll probably never use Windows again. It's pointless to use that over a linux distro unless you play games all day.
Saar a lot of legacy and even modern business or industrial software requires Windows. it doesn't usually play nice with a hypervisor unless you can dedicate a GPU to a VM running windows. Wine is often out of the question due to annoying licensing restrictions and the software subscription usually costs more than the machine that runs it.

I require specific software almost every day so dual booting is the only option. Most times I just stay on windows when messing around as it's annoying to switch over.
 
Jeet or no Jeet, I'll probably never use Windows again. It's pointless to use that over a linux distro unless you play games all day.
Steam's Proton wrapper is getting better and better. If you want a Linux-based gaming OS, Cachyo is pretty good. I'm getting by with Mint just fine.
 
Just give me the old UI, and maybe some small window to type what I want the PC to do for me. Stop with those massive changes no one asked for.
 
I can almost guarantee that the biggest reason for all of these changes is Enterprise users. Microsoft lives and breathes off Enterprise. What is one thing all companies around the world value? Efficiency. Win11 is not efficient at all, especially compared to Win10. MS knows that Apple's MacBook Neo is just the start for Apple to properly do some damage in this space. Right now the Neo is mostly for schools, but for some companies it could be the answer to replacing Windows with Mac instead. Most Windows software works on Mac. Office works better on Mac. Apple can really position this thing for Enterprise users who only use their work computers for Outlook/mail, the internet and MS Teams/Slack. If enough Enterprise users realize the cost savings are worth the switch, they will switch, and they will switch in droves.

Sure the Neo is limited to 8gb of RAM, but if you've ever used macOS you know Apple does an extraordinary job at memory management. For the average corporate office wagey, this laptop is a productivity beast compared to the Surface. MS has been asleep at the wheel for so long that this alone has spooked them more than Steam Machines or Linux in general. If they don't unfuck Win11 quick, companies will switch, they will boast about productivity improvements, then more will switch, and MS will be in a dire position of staying relevant in the market that they have dominated since the 90s. It might even be too late, but they have to do something before companies start to smell the roses.
 
Faster and more dependable File Explorer:
How in the fuckety fucking streetshitting fuck is it possible to fuck this one up, norton commander and the like had it figured out before the clock hit 1990.

TMJD.
 
I don't understand why companies don't just take the easy wins. They got trashed online so hard from the lack of taskbar functionality, and even it is React.js web dev shit it shouldn't be impossible to position the taskbar vertically. Its almost like they enjoy making things worse for the end user.
 
Every passing year on this earth I feel more and more like Terry Davis.

Sorry for ranting, but it feels like there's not even acknowledgement of how far back they've been sliding that it bugged tf out of me.

I am still seething HARD over desktop users of Windows 11 having to use some weird version of desktop windows that has shoehorned settings and design features taken directly from mobile computing, like the goofy ass taskbar that's over-sized, is designed for center-justification and no longer allows for the taksbar to be set to vertical mode. This sounds like a nonpoint, but it highlights incompetence. The checklist for first-time boot up personalizing settings in Windows has grown with every release, this is a remarkable feat considering that for each version the user has been allowed to control less and less.

Most displays/screens used with Windows outside of a phone are wide(ish) or ultra-wide, and will feature lots of wide, unused horizontal space with comparatively less for vertical, these ultrawide aspect ratios inherently benefit from vertical taskbars but that's not even a thing anymore outside of 3rd party solutions like (open sores) Windhawk's "Vertical Taskbar for Windows 11".

Windows has (p much always) been subject to massive amounts of piracy and at this stage Microsoft absolutely 100% deserves it, the expectation of paying a hundred or whatever for a genuine license is laughable when the quality of every version of Windows decreases with virtually every iteration, as more responsibility and power is wrested from the user, kicking and screaming the whole way.

Non-enterprise/commercial/institutional desktop Windows users are so far back in the scheme of Microsoft's planning, and it shows, our (Windows) user experience is whatever is left after every other Pajeet in Redmond had their way with it. Windows has always had these pressures directing and guiding it during development, but before the nerd hands making business decisions weren't smelly and brown, with an overemphasis on AI, and that's exactly how we got to CoPilot button in notepad and paint, everywhere, even if you removed it. Sorry for the whine.
 
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They're absolutely only saying this because Microsoft stock is currently down nearly 26% over the last 6 months lmao

Windows 11 is still going to be a big piece of shit, don't you worry!
 
Saar a lot of legacy and even modern business or industrial software requires Windows. it doesn't usually play nice with a hypervisor unless you can dedicate a GPU to a VM running windows. Wine is often out of the question due to annoying licensing restrictions and the software subscription usually costs more than the machine that runs it.

I require specific software almost every day so dual booting is the only option. Most times I just stay on windows when messing around as it's annoying to switch over.
I'm in the same boat. I'd still be bashing my head against a wall trying to learn Linux Mint and fixing its retarded driver issues if my work software wasn't Windows only because of built in licensing software. I tried to switch, realized I had a big boy job to do and couldn't justify any Linux dual-boot silliness, and decided to uncuck Win10 to the best of my abilities

I'll still be surfing the web in 20 years on this installation. Viruses and hackers come get me I'm not afraid
 
OP: Brown hands wrote this post.


A relocatable taskbar after 40+ years? You mean what EVERY other desktop system has always had?

Whooooooaaa buddy!
I had my taskbar at the top of Windows for decades prior to Slop 11 (and I've gone back to Win10 for now)

Just give me the old UI, and maybe some small window to type what I want the PC to do for me. Stop with those massive changes no one asked for.
I use Classic Shell/Open Shell and have since 8.1 shit up my desktop. Do recommend.
 
For example, if the professional blamers point out that you’ve forgotten what quality is,
2 Then start talking about quality.
3 Put the word “quality” in your company slogan,
4 Make speeches about quality,
5 Put up a lot of posters to remind your employees about quality,
6 And hire a whole bunch of new stupid people whose job it is to improve quality.
7 It doesn’t matter at all that none of this will really improve quality,
8 Since quality is an obsolete ideal,
9 Based on obsolete concepts such as hard work,
10 And pride,
11 And personal responsibility,
12 And other nonsense like that.
13 But if you keep talking about quality, eventually everyone will stop trying to blame you when your products don’t work, or fall apart the first time they try to use them,
14 Because it’s easier to find someone else to blame,
15 Or another thing to blame you for.

- The Boomer Bible, Mainliners 19.1-16
 
This is 100% shareholder appeasement because they've fucked up so much and so publicly.

Any changes will be token and not change anything important at best.
THIS.

The dude talks about shit I fight off daily - Copilot. Do not trust it, despise it. Wish MSFT would give us the option to permaban the shit from our machines. My machine runs 10, have a new one in the box that runs 11. Bought new one a while back when old one was farting on me. Got new one going but put it away for now, present one behaving and don't want to use 11 until I must.

Yo, Pavlan.

Go pick corn out of cowshit and eat it.

🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕🖕
 
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.

You know what's missing here? The words "yes putting AI there was clearly, obviously retarded, we're sorry for being so stupid, and we fired the manager who approved it".

This entire post is a non-apology apology for making some of the most idiotic product decisions in the last decade. They don't want to admit their biggest brains fucked up. They don't want to admit they have no idea what users want. Users don't want AI Notepad, they do want Explorer to work properly, they do want control over the desktop experience LIKE THEY USED TO HAVE before the jeets decided it was too hard to code more than one paradigm.

Each bullet point here is the result of a deliberate product choice, and nobody responsible is being publicly sacked. Fuck off, Microshitting jeet.
 
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.
Nigger what

They REMOVED this? Holy fuck running the cash register version of win10 has kept me blissfully unaware. :story:
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.
What have I been missing this sounds like a nightmare
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.
Unless it's back to Windows 7 levels of nagging I'm not sure I care given that Windows 10 already forces me to keep youtube videos on screen to trick it into not restarting automatically.

Surely they haven't made that part worse than windows 10 in 11...right? Right?
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.
How. I've heard about this but I still need to know HOW. How do you fuck this up. Was it coded in fucking javascript?
 
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