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I’ll believe it when I see it 😅 Microsoft has promised “performance improvements” before. But if this really cuts down that annoying delay when clicking Start or opening apps, I’m definitely updating on day one.

From what early testers are saying, budget hardware could benefit the most. Since the CPU boosts itself only for short bursts, even weaker systems should feel more responsive when launching apps or using menus.

I’m actually curious whether this will make a noticeable difference on lower-end PCs. My budget laptop runs Windows 11 okay-ish, but opening apps and File Explorer always feels slower than it should.

To be fair, macOS and Linux already do similar things. It’s called “race to sleep” — CPU spikes briefly to finish tasks faster and then returns to idle. It’s actually pretty smart for responsiveness and battery efficiency.

Honestly, Windows 11 needs this. My older laptop always has that tiny “click…wait…” feeling when opening stuff. If this removes that lag, I’m all for it.

 

Funny seeing people online calling it a “fake performance fix” though 😂

Yeah, I’ve been following this. From what I understand, it temporarily ramps up CPU frequency when you open apps or trigger important UI actions, then quickly drops back down to save power.

Apparently Microsoft says it’ll improve app launches and core shell experiences like Start, Search, and Action Center.

  • This reply was modified 4 days, 21 hours ago by Henry.

Just read that Microsoft is finally rolling out that new Windows 11 Low Latency Profile feature in June. Supposedly it boosts CPU speed for a few seconds when opening apps, Start menu, Search, etc. Sounds like Windows might finally feel faster 😅

Anyone tried it in the preview build yet?

I think the data recovery industry will grow a lot because of AI infrastructure.

One ransomware attack on an AI data center could be a disaster.

Most companies focus on AI performance, but backup and recovery are just as important.

Definitely. AI systems are useless without data. Recovery solutions will become critical.

I saw news about countries building their own AI data centers to store important data locally. It made me think — what happens if those systems lose data because of ransomware, accidental deletion, or hardware failure?

AI projects depend on huge amounts of data. Losing that data could cost companies months of work.

Do you think data recovery and backup tools will become even more important with the rise of AI data centers?

So, I tried all the AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude AI, Gemini, Perplexity, and so on while searching on fixing a corrupted MP4 video recorded on my Samsung S26 Ultra, and it suggested something called a “sample file method” for repairing unplayable videos. Has anyone here actually tried this? Sounds a bit technical.

That’s what I was worried about 😅 still a logical failure and not complete hardware death.

Hi had a similiar issue just yesterday, I’m on windows 11, and I think it might be the culprit. Basically had a random crash and no bootable device after restart. Windows started automatic recovery but nothing, had to go into the CMD in the Windows Recovery Utility to run a CHKDSK /f /r, which fixed the issue and I booted into windows fine EXCEPT not being able to access the main C: directory, having no admin access, can’t open task manager, can’t run elevated CMD. The files are still there and completely fine so give it a try if you need the files badly.

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