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Windows 11’s File Explorer will soon unzip files faster


In brief: If you frequently deal with zipped files, File Explorer should soon perform notably better during extraction. Developers have optimized the feature in the latest Windows 11 Preview Build. It’s the next step in Microsoft’s ongoing effort to improve archived files.

Microsoft tweaked the performance of File Explorer when extracting zip files in the latest Windows 11 Insiders Preview. The update should boost speed, especially when unzipping a large archive of small files. The change arrives in Windows 11 Build 27818, released to Insiders on the Canary Channel on Wednesday. Microsoft mentioned it without fanfare in the “Fixes” section of the build’s changelog.

“Did some more work to improve the performance of extracting zipped files in File Explorer, particularly where you’re unzipping a large number of small files,” the log reads.

Some metrics regarding the performance boost would have been nice, but we’ll have to take Redmond at its word. Let us know in the comments if you’ve tried this particular build, regularly work with large zip files full of tiny items, and have noticed speed improvements.

The zip extraction upgrade builds on a few archive handling improvements Microsoft began rolling out last year. A previous update added native support in File Explorer for opening and viewing new compressed file formats, including RAR, 7z, TAR, and other niche archive types. However, it still relies on external utilities for actually extracting those files. A second File Explorer-related update fixed an issue where the Home section would not load correctly, showing random floating text that read “Name.”

In addition to the zip extraction optimization, Build 27818 removes a feature from File Explorer. After installing this update, users will no longer see “suggested actions” pop up when copying things like phone numbers or future dates to the clipboard. Suggested actions provided options to quickly create a calendar event from a copied date or launch a dialer app for a phone number. That dialer app was typically Skype, but Microsoft will permanently shutter the popular communications app on May 5 to push users to Teams instead.

Microsoft posted a complete set of change details on its Insider blog for those interested in seeing what else may be coming to an upcoming stable release.



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