Windows quality update: May
29 Mei 2026 om 19:32
Hey Windows Insiders,
One of the best parts of the work is hearing directly from the people using Windows every day. I was recently in Hyderabad and Taipei meeting with local Windows Insiders, and those conversations gave me a lot of energy heading into Build next week.
The feedback weโre hearing from you continues to reinforce that weโre focused on the right places.
For me, the theme this month is momentum.
Some of that momentum is in performance. Weโre making steady progress across core areas like File Explorer, search, and broader system responsiveness, backed by architectural improvements that are starting to unlock more consistent gains across Windows.
Some of it is in craft: the small details that make Windows feel more polished, more predictable, and more personal. Address bar improvements in File Explorer. A modern Run experience. More taskbar positioning flexibility with app labels. These are the kinds of refinements weโre working through across Windows, and youโll continue to see more of them in Insider builds throughout the coming year.
Letโs get into what started showing up this month, including new experiences beginning to roll out in todayโs flights.
This month, we began rolling out more personalization for Taskbar and Start, two of the most used and most personal surfaces in Windows.
With these updates, you can move the taskbar to any edge of the screen, choose icon alignment based on its position, and use app labels across positions to make open windows easier to tell apart. Thereโs also a new smaller taskbar option to help reclaim screen space.
Weโre also making Start easier to shape around how you work. New controls let you independently show or hide sections like Pinned, Recommended, and All apps, adjust Start menu size, and hide your name and profile picture for more privacy. The Recommended section is also being updated to Recent, with better file relevancy, so surfaced content better reflects what youโre actually working on.
These updates have started to roll out in the Experimental Channel. Read more about the considerations and improvements weโre bringing to taskbar and Start in the recent blog post from Diego Baca.
Screenshot showing setup of voice isolation.[/caption]
Accessibility work in Windows often shows up across many different parts of the experience, because people use their PCs in different ways and in different environments.
For voice, one of the most common pieces of feedback we hear is sensitivity to background noise. With Voice Isolation in Voice Access, Windows can better focus on the speaker and reduce the impact of surrounding noise, helping commands come through more consistently without needing to change where or how youโre working.
Weโre also adding more ways to personalize how Windows looks and feels. New options like screen tint make it easier to adjust color and opacity based on preference or lighting conditions, giving people more control during longer sessions.
Weโre continuing to improve Magnifier as well, making it easier to set precise zoom levels and adjust zoom directly within the experience without needing to go into Settings.
Finally, we added new gesture-related controls for precision touchpads in Settings, including automatic scrolling, gesture speed controls, accelerated scrolling, and optional single-finger scrolling support.
These are areas we hear about regularly in feedback. The changes are gradual, but they help reduce friction and make Windows easier to use in more moments.
These updates began rolling out in the Experimental channel earlier this month.