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ComputingMicrosoftTechWindows

Windows 11 might finally feel faster this year

Windows 11 users in the Insider Program can now help improve performance by submitting slow system feedback with built-in diagnostics.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jul 21, 2025, 11:48 AM EDT
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Laptop set on a desk, seen running Microsoft Windows 11 operating system.
Photo: Alamy
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Since its debut in October 2021, Windows 11 has been under scrutiny for its performance quirks. Gamers on Intel’s hybrid “Performance” CPUs reported no tangible gains over Windows 10, and many everyday users felt that the new OS simply didn’t keep up its end of the bargain. In response, Microsoft has been iterating on the platform—speeding up the taskbar, slimming down boot-time app impact, and streamlining notifications. Yet echoes of sluggishness have persisted, prompting the company to take a more proactive stance: it’s now inviting insiders to let Windows 11 gather performance logs automatically whenever they hit a speed bump on their PCs.

Windows Insiders running the latest Dev‐channel build—version 26200.5710—will find a new “System Sluggishness” category in the Feedback Hub. When you file an issue under this heading, Windows silently scoops up diagnostic traces into %systemRoot%\Temp\DiagOutputDir\Whesvc, bundling them with your report for Microsoft’s engineers to analyze. “Logs are now collected when your PC has experienced any slow or sluggish performance,” the company explains. “Windows Insiders are encouraged to provide feedback when experiencing PC issues related to slow or sluggish performance, allowing Feedback Hub to automatically collect these logs, which will help us root cause issues faster.”

Performance doubts emerged early among users of Intel’s 12th‑ and 13th‑gen processors. These “big.LITTLE”-style chips juggle power and efficiency cores, yet benchmarks showed mixed results: some gaming workloads ran just as well—or even worse—on Windows 10. Meanwhile, those on aging laptops noticed that animations stuttered and app launches lagged behind expectations.

Microsoft insists that it’s already made significant strides. In mid‑2023, the company rolled out patches to accelerate the taskbar and notifications pane, while reducing the resource hit from startup apps. The 24H2 update last year further targeted older machines, with many reporting noticeably snappier load times and smoother UI transitions. But as any PC enthusiast will tell you, cumulative small gains can still leave gaps: fountains of low‑level latency can persist, especially when third‑party drivers and niche hardware configurations come into play.

Logging is only half the story. Microsoft is also tightening the noose on driver quality ahead of the 25H2 feature drop, expected in the second half of 2025. For a driver to earn certification, developers must submit to static code analysis—automated scans that flag potential bugs or inefficiencies before software ever reaches your machine. The hope is simple: fewer buggy drivers translate to fewer mysterious freezes and hiccups.

By combining richer telemetry with stricter driver vetting, Microsoft is aiming for a one‐two punch against sluggishness. The company’s public roadmap hints at broader kernel optimizations, too, although details remain under wraps for now. If early logs point to systemic issues—say, a particular graphics driver or a background service hogging CPU cycles—Microsoft can roll out targeted hotfixes much faster than before.

Naturally, handing over more logs raises eyebrows about what data Microsoft is collecting. But according to the Insider blog, these performance traces are stored locally until you voluntarily hit “Submit,” and they focus strictly on metrics like CPU usage, I/O wait times, and thread scheduling events. No personal documents or browsing history are scooped up. For privacy‐minded users, it’s worth noting that only those on the Dev channel will see this feature—and that logs never leave your hard drive unless you explicitly send them.

If you’re curious (or frustrated) enough to help shape Windows 11’s future:

  1. Join the Windows Insider Program and switch to the Dev channel.
  2. Update to build 26200.5710 or later via Settings > Windows Update > Insider Preview.
  3. Reproduce any laggy behavior—perhaps opening a bloated start menu or firing up a heavy game.
  4. File feedback under Desktop > System Sluggishness in Feedback Hub, then hit submit.

Even if you don’t plan on moving to the Dev channel, keeping your system patched with the latest Beta—or Production—updates goes a long way. Microsoft has already baked many of last year’s fixes into 23H2 and 24H2, and 25H2 should continue that trend for everyone.

Windows 11’s journey from a sleek new UI to a battle‑hardened, performance‑tuned OS has been anything but linear. Complaints will never vanish entirely—new hardware always exposes fresh wrinkles—but by harnessing real‑world feedback at scale, Microsoft hopes to close the loop faster. If these logs lead to fewer stutters and quicker load times, insiders and mainstream users alike will reap the benefits, making Windows 11 feel every bit as nimble as its predecessor—and perhaps even better.


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