Skip to main content

This Windows 11 update could seriously boost your SSD

Ever since it launched, Windows 11 has suffered from an issue where solid-state drives might not perform to the fullest possible speeds. A Windows Update in December slightly alleviated those problems for some people, but the latest preview update for Windows 11 could possibly help address it once and for all.

According to the changelog for the preview update, named KB5008353, Microsoft finally addressed the performance regression issue that occurs when you enable the update sequence number (USN) journal. This is typically where Windows stores the filesystem changes made to your disk drive. And, per posts on social media, was the culprit of poor SSD speeds from the beginning.

The SSD in a Surface Pro 8.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

On Reddit, a user mentioned that after installing the preview update, the write speeds on their SSD are nearly three and a half times faster. Another user had a similar experience, mentioning that File Explorer now feels faster. And, as both Windows Latest and TechRadar note, someone even reported back to Microsoft in the Feedback Hub that their PC with Windows 11 is now booting faster, whereas it previously loaded up slower than Windows 10 before installing the update.

KB5008353 doesn’t just help boost SSD speeds, but it also delivers a fix for the issue where some image editing programs were not rendering colors correctly on certain high dynamic range (HDR) displays. The update even delivers a new Microsoft Account panel in the Windows 11 settings app. The panel helps you monitor your Microsoft 365 subscription and OneDrive storage without having to go online to the Microsoft Account website.

Because this update is only a preview, it will not install to your system automatically like routine monthly Windows Update. It’s likely to be released to everyone in the next two weeks as a standard security update, but if you want to install it today, you can in a couple of steps.

Just visit Windows Update, and check for updates as usual. In the Optional Updates area, you’ll find KB5008353 listed, along with a link to Download and install. Click the link, and Windows will pull the update from Microsoft’s servers and onto your PC. You’ll then need to restart your PC to apply it. If all else fails and you’re not seeing this update at all, simply visit Microsoft’s Update Catalogue and manually download the file, double click to open it, and follow the instructions on your screen.

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
Update your Chrome browser now to gain this critical security feature
Google Chrome icon in mac dock.

Yesterday, in a blog post on Google's security blog, Willian Harris from Chrome's Security Team said that Google is improving the security of Chrome cookies on Windows PCs by adopting a similar method used in macOS to help protect users from info-stealing malware.

The security update addresses session cookies that authenticate your identity when you switch apps without logging back in. Google wants to adopt the security system used by Keychain on macOS and start using "a new protection on Windows," which updates Data Protection API (DPAPI) and brings a new security tool called "application-bound" encryption.

Read more
This new Windows 11 setting could improve performance and battery life
Windows 11 updates are moving to once a year.

Yesterday, Microsoft released the Windows 11 26252 build, which brings a flood of innovations that will give users a much-needed power boost. One of those changes is a new power setting that will provide the user more control when their PC is on battery power or not, as Phantom Ocean 3 mentions in a post on X (formerly Twitter), which was noticed by Windows Latest.

In theory, this greater degree of control will allow your system to automate power settings so that you don't forget to manually switch them while plugged in or on battery.

Read more
It only took 41 years, but Notepad just got its most important update ever
The Notepad app on Windows 11.

After 41 years of being part of Windows, Notepad has finally been updated by Microsoft with two essential features: autocorrect and spellcheck. Given how prevalent spellcheck is across any app where you can enter text, you could be forgiven for thinking that Notepad already had the feature, but it was just added to the app available in Windows 11.

Microsoft originally announced the addition in March, and it began rolling out spellcheck in Notepad to Windows Insiders the following month. Over the past few days, the wider Windows 11 install base has received the update. You probably never noticed it -- I checked out Notepad on my PC and saw spellcheck was enabled, and I haven't seen a peep from Windows Update.

Read more