New Windows 11 machines can now reach the desktop in half the time. Your brand-new laptop no longer holds you hostage during setup. Windows 11’s out-of-box experience now includes an “update later” button that lets you skip the mandatory update phase entirely. What used to take 40 minutes of thumb-twiddling can now happen in roughly 20 minutes—finally matching the instant gratification you get from unboxing an iPhone.
This global rollout comes after months of testing with select user groups. Microsoft engineer Aria explains the trade-off: “If you choose to skip updates, the latest features and security fixes won’t be applied until you choose to take the updates after hitting the desktop.”
You’re essentially trading immediate patch protection for the ability to actually use your expensive new machine without delay.
The Control Wars Continue
Microsoft gives users freedom while simultaneously taking it away elsewhere.
This development highlights Microsoft’s complicated relationship with user control. The company has been refining Windows Update controls, adding features like:
- Indefinite postponement
- Monthly restart limits
Yet these improvements come alongside ongoing tensions about forced updates.
The contradiction reveals Microsoft’s balancing act between user experience and security imperatives. Users report unwanted update pushes despite their preference settings, suggesting the company still struggles with respecting user choice consistently.
What This Means for Your Next PC
Faster setup changes the new computer experience entirely.
The change particularly benefits anyone buying PCs during busy periods—think back-to-school shopping or holiday gifting when you need devices ready immediately. No more explaining to frustrating computer members why their “fast” new computer crawls through setup day.
Smart users should weigh security implications carefully. Skip updates if you need the PC operational for urgent work, but prioritize patching before connecting to sensitive networks. The feature works best when you control the timing rather than letting Microsoft decide when your workday gets interrupted.
This represents Microsoft acknowledging what Apple figured out years ago: first impressions matter more than perfect security patches on day one.





























