Windows 11 gets a fix for a nasty CPU bug that slowed down your PC

Windows 11 Controller bar in 2022 update
(Image credit: Microsoft)

Windows 11 insiders have witnessed the release of a new test build which fixes some nasty bugs, including a couple pertaining to File Explorer, and it adds some minor new features to boot.

Windows 11 (22H2) build 22621.898 has hit the release preview channel, and there’s an important bug fix for a problem with File Explorer that triggered high CPU usage, slowing your PC down, which sometimes occurred when opening a file.

Furthermore, OneDrive users will now get storage alerts telling them when they’re running out of online storage space on the Systems page (in Settings). There’s also the ability to buy more storage from within the Settings menu, too.


Analysis: Crucial part of the Windows 11 interface

Those are some useful extra additions, but nothing major – the main focus here is a lot of bug squashing, and some vital work on that front, too. File Explorer is the central piece of the Windows UI, so it’s good to see that CPU slowdown issue is now fixed – and indeed the problem which was causing File Explorer to fall over completely (never a good thing, of course).

We’re looking forward to some bigger changes coming to Windows 11, aside from smoothing over bugs, and indeed we just heard about one that we’ve been keenly awaiting for some time – the ability to ungroup apps on the taskbar.

In other words, a ‘never combine’ option that’s always been present on Windows 10, but was dropped for Windows 11 for some unfathomable reason. That’s a big step forward, at least in our book, though that said, it should’ve been a choice from the get-go (fewer options never being a good thing, generally speaking).

Via Neowin

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - 'I Know What You Did Last Supper' - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).