Table of Contents
- Why Is Windows 11’s June 2025 Update Causing Excitement Among Power Users?
- The Taskbar Gets Smarter (Finally)
- Download Details You Need to Know
- What Else Changed?
- EU Users Get App Choice Freedom
- Copilot+ PCs Gain Microsoft 365 Integration
- PC Migration Tool Preview
- File Explorer Performance Boost
- Storage and Performance Fixes
- Smaller But Important Updates
- Should You Install This Update?
Why Is Windows 11’s June 2025 Update Causing Excitement Among Power Users?
I’ve been testing Windows 11’s latest optional update, and I need to share what I found. KB5060829 dropped in June 2025 for version 24H2, and it’s packed with changes that actually matter.
This isn’t your typical security patch. Microsoft calls it a “feature drop,” which explains why the download weighs nearly 3GB. That’s massive compared to older Windows 10 updates that barely hit 700MB.
The Taskbar Gets Smarter (Finally)
The biggest win here is taskbar scaling. I’ve struggled with cluttered taskbars for years, and this fixes it.
After installing KB5060829, your taskbar icons shrink when space gets tight. No more hunting through that annoying overflow menu. You control this through Settings > Taskbar > Behaviors, where you pick “Show smaller taskbar buttons.”
I tested three options:
- Always small: Icons stay compact regardless
- Auto-shrink: Icons compress only when taskbar fills up
- Never: Keeps the old overflow behavior
The difference is night and day. My taskbar feels cleaner, and I can see all my apps without clicking extra buttons.
Download Details You Need to Know
Getting KB5060829 requires manual action. It won’t install automatically unless you check “Get all latest updates” in Windows Update settings.
Direct download options:
- 64-bit systems: ~3GB
- ARM64 devices: Slightly under 3GB
- Through Windows Update: Less than 1GB (compressed)
The Update Catalog gives you .msu files for offline installation. I recommend the Windows Update route unless you need offline installers.
What Else Changed?
EU Users Get App Choice Freedom
European users now control default apps better. Set your browser as default, and Windows asks if you want it handling PDFs and HTML too. Your chosen browser gets pinned to taskbar and Start menu automatically (you can disable this).
Copilot+ PCs Gain Microsoft 365 Integration
Right-click anywhere to access “Click to Do” features. The new addition lets you query Microsoft 365 Copilot directly from this menu. You need an active M365 subscription for this to work.
PC Migration Tool Preview
Windows Backup app now shows a placeholder for PC-to-PC file transfers. Enter a code, transfer files wirelessly between computers. It’s not functional yet, but the groundwork is there.
This feels like Microsoft’s push to help Windows 10 users migrate to new Windows 11 machines.
File Explorer Performance Boost
Archive extraction runs 15% faster now. I noticed this mainly with large archives containing many small files. Opening .rar files and copying content feels snappier.
Storage and Performance Fixes
- Storage Spaces Direct works more efficiently
- Windows deletes unused language packs properly now
- Search responds faster (no more 10-second delays)
- Taskbar app indicators are wider and more visible
Smaller But Important Updates
Voice Access supports more languages and accepts custom dictionary words. Windows Share shows link previews now. Quick Actions won’t freeze anymore, and accessibility descriptions are clearer.
Several keyboard shortcuts got fixed:
- WIN + CTRL + Number works again
- ALT+Tab won’t freeze other apps during gaming
- File Explorer handles window snapping better
Microsoft also patched an unexpected green screen issue that some users experienced.
Should You Install This Update?
I recommend it if you use your taskbar heavily or need the EU app defaults. The taskbar scaling alone makes this worthwhile for power users.
Skip it if you prefer waiting for tested updates. Everything here rolls into July 2025’s mandatory Patch Tuesday release anyway.
The 3GB download size concerns me. Bundling AI models that many PCs can’t even use inflates patch sizes unnecessarily. But the features justify the download if you have the bandwidth.
This update represents Microsoft’s continued push toward AI integration and user choice. The taskbar improvements alone make it worth considering, especially if you juggle multiple applications daily.