WW 976: Full Thurrottle - Microsoft's Plan To Save Windows in 2026
Windows Weekly (Audio)
Leo Laporte
4.3 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 25 March 2026
⏱️ 139 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
In 2015, Satya Nadella said that he wanted users to love Windows. But Microsoft has only enshittified Windows more aggressively since then. Paul wrote a book. And now Microsoft says it's changed, baby, and it's serious this time. Here's what was said ... and what was not said.
A Timeline
- Early signs of positive change: Rust in the Windows kernel, numerous new security features in Windows 11 - "two sides" of Windows, the engineering side and the "let's push AI at all costs/UX" side - more recently, Baseline Security Mode and User Transparency and Consent announcement
- Last September, Pavan Davuluri took over Windows and reorganized the business immediately, bringing Server/Core back in-house
- In December, Paul saw the first signs of positive changes in OneDrive, while not perfect, a major step back from the enshittification there. It took a few months to understand exactly what changed.
- In January, there are over one billion Windows 11 users. Davuluri first mentions a push for quality in 2026 - "pain points"
- In February, Nadella announced leadership changes that included people directly in charge of security and engineering quality
- Now, Microsoft has announced that it will address (some of) the complaints about Windows 11, and this includes performance and reliability improvements across the board
Microsoft said it will
- Let you move the Taskbar to other screen edges, finally
- Improve File Explorer performance
- Make changes to how users to skip Windows Updates (vaguely)
- Make improvements to Widgets (but what about the quality problem?)
- Remove unnecessary Copilot entry points
- Make the Windows Insider Program more transparent
- More relevant recommendations in Start - ??
- Reduce resource usage across the board, give more resources to what you're doing (good for gaming, especially)
- Reduce interaction latency - WInUI3
- Reduce search latency throughout - also context menus and navigation (which is WinUI3, I guess)
- Make improvements to Windows Subsystem for Linux
- OS, drive, and in-box app reliability improvements
- Windows Hello improvements - Wonders if this is tied to the complaint about speed here
What Microsoft didn't discuss
- Of the several items in the Windows 11 Enshittification Checklist, only one was addressed by Davuluri's post, Windows Update chaos, and then only partially. Not mentioned: Forced telemetry, bundled crapware, forced Microsoft account sign-ins, forced Microsoft Edge usage and configuration harassment, hardware requirements (less relevant today), OneDrive behaviors (partially addressed already).
- Recall is rare in that it's opt-in, but most of the AI and unwanted features are opt-out or worse
- Controlled Feature Releases are not controlled, but they do suck
- Microsoft has monthly Security Updates that include new features. Security and Feature updates should be separate and have different pausing rules
- Microsoft is not removing Copilot from Windows, nor is it doing less AI; it is just removing Copilot icons from most places and trying to be more thoughtful about how it deploys AI in Windows 11
- The Windows Insider Program makes 0 sense right now, and this was only partially addressed; it's not clear what's changing yet
- Davuluri says that WinUI3 UIs are the solution to many performance problems, but just using an old
Mor
These show notes have been truncated due to length. For the full show notes, visit https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly/episodes/976
Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | It's time for Windows Weekly. |
| 0:02.2 | Paul and Richard are here, and we have lots to talk about, including Microsoft's plan to save Windows this year. |
| 0:09.5 | Does it really need saving? |
| 0:11.6 | Maybe it does. |
| 0:13.7 | We'll talk about a surprise with the Nintendo Switch 2 and how you can get Paul's books for free. |
| 0:20.9 | That's coming up next on Windows Weekly. |
| 0:25.5 | Podcasts you love. |
| 0:27.2 | From people you trust. |
| 0:29.7 | This is Twitter. |
| 0:46.7 | This is Windows Weekly with Paul Therod and Richard Campbell, episode 976, recorded Wednesday, March 25th, 2026. |
| 0:48.5 | Full Therotle. |
| 0:50.9 | It's time for Windows Weekly. |
| 0:53.1 | Hello, all you winners, you dozers too. |
| 0:56.1 | Wake up, wake up, wake up, wake up. Here paul therot from therot.com hello mr t hello leo and from beautiful redmond i guess wedman washington |
| 1:06.8 | it is mr richard campbell of's Radio, soon to hit their 2000 episode. |
| 1:14.8 | Dotnet Rocks, we recorded 2000. |
| 1:16.7 | It'll publish at the end of April. |
| 1:18.4 | We had a big party here. |
| 1:20.4 | I'm in the green room, so I decided I had to wear green. |
| 1:23.7 | Nice. |
| 1:24.1 | You know, every time the MVP summit is on, I grab a studio and shoot from there. |
| 1:29.5 | They decided this year to offer up the studios to whoever needed them, and I couldn't get a three-hour block. |
... |
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