In the latest update to its operating system, Windows 11 is receiving a significant refresh of its core file-management app, File Explorer. According to coverage by The Verge, Microsoft will introduce a pre-loading mechanism that keeps portions of File Explorer warmed in memory, thereby reducing the noticeable “cold-start” delay when opening folder windows—particularly on lower-end hardware. This optional feature appears in Insider Preview Build 26220.7271 and can be toggled off by users. At the same time, the right-click (context) menu is being “decluttered”: less-frequently used commands like “Compress to ZIP,” “Copy as path,” and cloud-sync options are being moved into nested fly-outs (e.g., a “Manage file” submenu or “Cloud provider” submenu) to streamline the interface and reduce vertical space usage. Early lab tests by Windows Latest show the context menu now fills about half the vertical screen space was before, making it more user-friendly and visually efficient. Independent IT coverage confirms the changes aim at gain in day-to-day responsiveness, rather than sweeping architectural overhaul, with a broad rollout expected in early 2026.
Sources: The Verge, WebPro News
Key Takeaways
– Microsoft is introducing an optional background preload for File Explorer in Windows 11 to reduce startup latency, particularly on less powerful devices.
– The context menu in File Explorer is being reorganized: common actions remain top-level, while rarer actions are tucked into nested fly-outs to reduce clutter and save vertical space.
– The changes reflect a pragmatic, incremental improvement strategy—targeting high-visibility UI and performance pain points rather than a full overhaul—and the rollout to the general population is slated for early 2026.
In-Depth
For years, one of the recurring frustrations for Windows users has been the slightly sluggish launch of File Explorer after startup or when no folder window is already open: you double-click the folder icon, expect instant access, and sometimes get a brief pause while the UI comes to life. Even more annoying for many: opening the right-click menu (aka context menu) can flood the screen with dozens of entries—cloud actions, share options, third-party extensions—all stacked in one long list that seems to stretch on forever. With its latest update cycle, Microsoft appears to be addressing both of these usability complaints in a clear and customer-friendly way.
According to The Verge’s reporting on the Windows 11 Dev Preview Build 26220.7271, Microsoft is rolling out a pre-load feature for File Explorer: the system will initialize key parts of File Explorer in the background so when you actually open a folder, the interface is already primed. On lower-end systems—such as tablets, handheld PCs, or machines with slower storage—this should translate into a more immediate, smooth experience. Crucially, Microsoft still gives users control: the feature is optional and can be disabled via the Folder Options settings.
In parallel, the context menu is getting a sensible redesign. As documented by Windows Latest, the new menu groups less-used items into a “Manage file” fly-out and places cloud-provider commands (e.g., “Always keep on this device”, “Free up space”, a “Send to My Phone” item) into provider-specific submenus. The result: a shorter, cleaner menu that’s easier to scan and navigate. Early testing suggests the new menu occupies roughly half the vertical space compared with the prior version.
From an enterprise or advanced-user perspective, these updates are significant—even if they aren’t headline-grabbing. Rather than rewriting the shell architecture or discarding legacy components wholesale, Microsoft is tackling two of the most visible pain points: launch delay and menu overload. Industry observers (such as WebProNews) frame this as a pragmatic “feel-good” improvement—small on scale but noticeable in daily use.
What makes these changes noteworthy for a right-leaning, productivity-focused audience is the way they align with user choice and efficient design. The pre-load feature remains opt-out, not forced; the menu reorganization doesn’t remove functionality—it simply places less-frequently used items one click deeper. The result is less “bloat” on the surface and more straightforward workflows. For organizations managing Windows fleets (especially mixed-hardware environments), this means fewer complaints about “laggy” performance or unwieldy menus. For individual power-users, it indicates a shift: UI refinements targeted at productivity rather than purely cosmetic bells-and-whistles.
In practical terms: if you run Windows 11 on a mainstream laptop or tablet, you may already see the option “Enable window preloading for faster launch times” in File Explorer → View → Options → Folder Options → View. If you prefer minimal background resource usage, you can un-check it. Meanwhile, the next time you right-click a file or folder, take note of how much shorter the menu appears—core actions like Open, Cut, Copy, Rename remain immediately visible; rarer commands live inside “Manage file” or “Cloud provider” submenus, reducing visual noise and pointer travel. From a user-experience standpoint, it’s a welcome shift in the right direction.
Of course, no update is without trade-offs: pre-loading uses memory even when File Explorer isn’t in active use; nesting commands means one extra click for certain advanced actions. Some old-school users may prefer the “everything visible on one menu” approach and may even revert to the legacy context menu (via registry tweaks). But by giving users and administrators flexibility, Microsoft appears to balance performance gains with user control.
In short: Windows 11’s upcoming update for File Explorer reflects a quietly determined effort to streamline everyday interactions, reduce lag, and preserve choice—qualities that align with the productivity-and-efficiency mindset many serious users bring to their workflows. Expectations of “big change” may have been tempered, but those who open folders dozens of times per day or right-click files thousands of times a year will likely appreciate the under-the-hood polish.

