The Windows 11 June update makes your Start menu and Search feel much more snappier

Windows 11's June update rolls out Low Latency Profile to all 24H2 and 25H2 users, a CPU boost technique that makes Start, Search, and Action Center feel noticeably faster.

The Windows 11 June update makes your Start menu and Search feel much more snappier

Low Latency Profile is the first targeted fix Microsoft has shipped for shell responsiveness, and the June update brings it to every eligible PC rather than just Insider preview testers.

Windows 11 Laptop Microsoft

If you’ve ever clicked on the Start button and watched the menu appear after a second or two, you already understand the problem Microsoft is trying to solve with its June 2026 Windows 11 update. 

The update (KB5094126) rolled out on June 9, 2026, for WIndows 11 24H2 and 25H2, and targets the shell responsiveness issues that have quietly frustrated users since its launch in 2021. The headline change is the broad rollout of the Low Latency Profile.

Taskbar position options windows 11Zac Bowden / X

What is Low Latency Profile and why does it matter?

It’s something that Microsoft first tested in the May 26 preview build (with limited availability) before promoting it to the stable channel (with broader availability) this month. 

The way it works is that the Low Latency Profile briefly spikes the CPU frequency to its maximum for one to three seconds, providing an additional burst of performance whenever you interact with the core system features, including the Start menu, Search, Action Center, and taskbar flyouts. 

The burst is short enough that it doesn’t meaningfully impact battery life or thermals, but substantial enough that the shell responds immediately rather than after half a second, making those core system features feel more responsive.

With the Low Latency Profile, system flyouts can open up to 70% faster, and core apps can launch up to 40% quicker compared to the same hardware running the previous build. The performance gains are most visible on older or lower-spec machines that barely cleared Windows 11’s hardware requirements and have felt sluggish ever since.

Windows 11Windows

What else is new in the June update?

Shared Audio now lets two people listen to audio from a single Windows 11 PC simultaneously via Bluetooth LE Audio. The Windows Task Manager gets new NPU usage columns, making it easier to see how your neural processing unit is being used during on-device AI tasks.

Multiple apps can now access the same camera stream simultaneously. In addition, Windows Search now finds local files with as few as two characters, which, as far as I understand, is a quality-of-life improvement for daily users. 

Windows Setup now lets you choose a custom user folder name during initial installation. Windows Hello has also been refined to consistently fall back to face or fingerprint-based sign-in after alternative methods have been used. 

You shouldn’t hold off on installing the update, as it includes the June 2026 Patch Tuesday fixes for more than 200 security vulnerabilities.

Shikhar Mehrotra

For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…

OpenAI teams up with Visa to enable secure payments through AI agents

ChatGPT could soon buy things on your behalf thanks to OpenAI's new Visa partnership

openai-chatgpt-visa-payment

Imagine telling ChatGPT to reorder your paper towels or find the best wireless headphones in your budget, and it just handles the purchase without you lifting a finger. That is exactly what OpenAI and Visa are now building toward.

The two companies announced a strategic partnership at the Visa Payments Forum, with plans to bring Visa's global payment infrastructure directly into OpenAI's AI agent experiences, including ChatGPT and the Atlas browser.

Read more

Intel details Project Firefly and how it’s pushing affordable laptops to unseat the MacBook Neo

Cheap laptops are finally getting the glow-up they deserve!

Intel firefly laptop prototype

It’s no secret that the Windows budget-market segment has been stagnating for years. While premium machines kept getting thinner, lighter, and faster, the affordable segment was stuck with five to seven year old technology and minor updates. 

Intel, it seems, wants to change that. In a recent Talking Tech interview, the company detailed how Project Firefly plans to drastically overhaul the budget laptop segment by creating a whole new ecosystem of laptops. 

Read more

Your ChatGPT bills could soon get a drastic price cut

The AI price war is here, and for once, your wallet is the winner

OpenAI logo on Microsoft surface

If you have ever winced at your monthly AI bill, here's some good news. According to a report by The Wall Street Journal, OpenAI is considering drastically lowering the prices it charges users as it fights to win customers from its rival, Anthropic.

The company is weighing significant cuts to its token pricing, the unit AI firms use to bill for their products. Interestingly, the move is in anticipation of similar cuts OpenAI expects from Anthropic. So whichever AI service you use, your bills should get smaller.

Read more