This week, Microsoft unveiled a major overhaul coming soon to Windows 11’s search experience that’s designed to fix its biggest flaws and criticisms. For a long time, many have agreed that search on Windows is pretty much broken, but the new changes that are now in testing may finally be fixing that problem.
I’ve been testing the new Windows Search out over the last two days, and I’m very impressed with the new experience. Right off the bat, the search pane is no longer a noisy mess of Bing ads and sponsored content. It’s a clean list of recent searches, exactly what you’d expect from a search pane.
Search items that appear in this list are categorized so that you know whether an item is an app, document, setting, or web search. Hovering over items in this menu will display options depending on the type of item it is, such as apps which present the option to pin it to the Taskbar or run as an administrator.
You can also right-click on any of the items in the search pane for more info, which displays additional options such as uninstall or app settings, open file location, as well as the ability to remove the item from the recents list.
Getting onto the actual searching experience, it’s a major step up. The UI is nice and clean, and web results now pretty much never show up at the top unless you are actively searching for a website or query that makes sense for a search engine. In the old Window Search, searing for “windows central” would always bring the Bing result to the top, but now it prioritizes my local files and folders.
When a web result does appear at the top, you’ll no longer see any ads or sponsored content in that result. The Bing results are now ad-free, showing only results that relate to your search query, which is amazing. You no longer have to worry about accidentally clicking on a link or app that has paid to be there.
I also find that search results are now more accurate based on how you use your system. For example, on a PC where I have both the Photos and Photoshop app installed, typing “photos” actually surfaces Photoshop, which is what I want. I believe this is happening because I’ve never opened the Photos app on my PC before, and so Windows assumes that I’d want to use the app I use more often or most recently.
To test this theory, I ran Photos a few times and then typed “photos” again, and sure enough the Photos app was now appearing above Photoshop. To triple confirm, I started opening Photoshop a few times, and Photoshop became the top result for “photos” after.
This is great for those who have a system set in place where all the apps they ever use are already in full circulation on their PC. Windows knows which apps you use most, and will now do its best to position them as a best match when it thinks you’re searching for it, listing follow up results below it that you can manually select if that’s what you need instead.
I also find that search is now a little smarter and more dynamic. If you don’t know the name of an app, you can search for a category and Windows will do its best to surface an app that it thinks can do that job. For example, if I type “video editor” into the search box, Windows surfaces Clipchamp as a result, as that’s the only video editor I have installed.
Windows Search now also does a much better job at surfacing settings that you might want to configure. If I type “temp” it’ll show delete temporary files, or if i type “wifi” the wi-fi settings page is at the top. Even things like “insider” now correctly surface the Insider settings page. You can now pretty much search for any Windows Setting and have it accurately appear in the search pane, without needing to open Settings first.
Some settings even have configurable options within the search pane. For example, typing restart PC will show a setting to do so right from search, which then lets you select whether you want to restart or shut down. It’s pretty neat, though most people will probably find it faster to just do that from Start.
Overall, these new search improvements are a real strong step in the right direction. In my brief testing, I’ve not really been able to fault it, and understand why the best match results are what they are. Being able to turn off things like Microsoft Store and web results are also a great addition, letting you craft your experience into whatever you need it to be. If you only ever want local search results, you can make it so.
It’s clear that even in its default state now, local results are the number one priority. Unless your search query is clearly one intended for a search engine, Windows will more than likely place a local result as a best match, which is going to address the biggest complaint most people have with Windows Search.
These improvements are rolling out now in preview for Windows Insiders, with general availability expected later this year.
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