Windows 11 is finally getting some of the personality people felt it lost, but the real story is bigger than a cosmetic tweak: Microsoft is loosening the grip on the taskbar and Start menu, giving users more control over where things sit, how they look, and what appears by default. At the same time, if you want your Windows 11 desktop to feel a little more like the flexible, slightly odd, power-user-friendly Windows of old, there are already a few practical ways to get there right now.
The simplest way to think about it is this: Windows 11 is moving from a one-size-fits-most design toward a setup you can shape around your habits. Microsoft’s latest Insider changes point to taskbar placement on any edge of the screen, tighter taskbar sizing, and more Start menu controls, including section-level toggles and better separation between Start recommendations and File Explorer history.
Right now, though, most users are not on that future build, so the real question is how to make Windows 11 feel less generic today. The answer is not one magic switch. It is a mix of settings, layout choices, and a few habits that make the desktop look and behave more like your own machine.
The first thing to change is the taskbar, because that is where Windows 11 feels the most corporate by default. In current supported versions, Microsoft officially lets you adjust alignment, hide the taskbar, pin apps, and manage other taskbar behaviors through Settings. If your build includes the newer smaller-button option, that can reclaim a little visual space and make the desktop feel less chunky, especially on smaller displays. Microsoft’s newest Insider work goes further by preparing top, left, and right taskbar placement, but that is still rolling out in the Experimental channel rather than to everyone.
Start is the second big piece, and it is where the personality of the system really shows. Microsoft says it is simplifying Start customization by adding section-level toggles for Pinned, Recommended, and All, plus a separate control for file recommendations, so you can hide the clutter without breaking recent files elsewhere. It is also improving the quality of the recommendations it does show, renaming Recommended to Recent and refining which files appear. In plain English, that means the menu should feel less like an ad board and more like a useful launcher.
If you want a more unusual Windows 11 setup, the current version already lets you push the design in that direction with a few choices. You can keep Start minimal by pinning only the apps you actually open daily, reduce the taskbar’s visual weight if your build supports smaller buttons, and use taskbar alignment to make the layout feel more centered or more traditional. That alone makes Windows 11 feel less like the default out-of-box experience and more like a custom workstation.
There is also a deeper reason people keep asking for this kind of flexibility. Many users, especially developers and multitaskers, want vertical screen space back, and many others simply want the interface to stop deciding too much for them. Microsoft’s own wording reflects that shift: it says the taskbar and Start are among the most visible parts of Windows, and improving them is central to quality, trust, and craft. That is a notable change in tone from the earlier Windows 11 era, when the platform often prioritized consistency over individuality.
The interesting part is that the newest Microsoft direction does not just add features, it restores a feeling. Older Windows versions let people rearrange the shell more freely, and Windows 11 originally pulled back from that flexibility, which is why these updates are landing as a kind of apology tour for power users. Microsoft is not simply adding polish; it is admitting that a desktop should adapt to the person using it, not the other way around.
For people writing about this topic, the best angle is not nostalgia for nostalgia’s sake. It is the idea that “weird” in Windows used to mean personal, practical, and a little rebellious, while modern Windows often feels streamlined to the point of sameness. The current Insider changes suggest Microsoft is trying to recover some of that older spirit without abandoning the cleaner design language of Windows 11. That makes this a good story about control, not just appearance.
What makes this worth paying attention to is that Windows is quietly becoming less rigid again. For years, the complaint was that Windows 11 looked polished but acted stubborn. These updates suggest Microsoft has finally heard that criticism and is rebuilding some of the weird, user-shaped character that made Windows feel like Windows in the first place.
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