Microsoft released Insider builds 26220.8282 and 26300.8289 on April 24, 2026, via the Windows Insider Experimental and Beta channels, introducing a redesigned Update Center that gives users unprecedented control over when, whether, and how their PCs install updates.
What's new: The Update Center lets you skip updates entirely during device setup, defer patches for 35 days (and extend that deadline indefinitely by repeating the deferral), and shut down or restart without triggering automatic installs. Driver updates now carry labels (audio, display, battery) so you know what's changing before you commit. You decide when your machine restarts.

Why it matters: Microsoft is targeting roughly one forced reboot per month, a sharp cut from the current cadence that interrupts workflows and frustrates users mid-presentation. This shift puts autonomy front and center. It's the clearest answer yet to years of complaints about surprise restarts and unwanted feature upgrades. As part of Microsoft's broader 2026 user control push, the company is betting that fewer forced interruptions will restore trust without compromising security.

What's next: The Update Center is live now for Windows Insiders and will reach general availability later in 2026 across all Windows editions (Home, Pro, and Enterprise), ensuring every user gets the same level of control.










