Say what you want about Windows—I've certainly said my fair share—but recent months have shown at least that Microsoft is willing to make some positive changes. Now, at least some of these are coming to fruition, as the company is releasing an improved Windows start menu search box for Insiders. The changes are ones that do look genuinely substantial for, well, probably anyone who regularly uses a Windows PC. They include:A calmer home screenClearer resultsNo promotional content in web resultsChoice over whether web and MS store suggestions appearLocal results prioritised when they're a better matchTuning to which Windows settings appear highest in resultsImprovements to surfacing the correct filesGeneral reliability improvements (reduced issues/crashes) Obviously, a lot of the proof will be in the eating of the pudding. The improvements to reliability and search surfacing the correct files, for instance, aren't something to gather from screenshots alone. But the screenshots that Microsoft does provide for some of the other changes are promising.In particular, I like the simplified and cleaner menu when searching, showing only a list of recent searches. I also like the preview pane for files and the fact that file extensions aren't hidden.(Image credit: Microsoft)Probably the best thing, though, is the ability to disable web and app store results. I can't remember the last time I wanted to search for something online via the Start menu. I can, however, remember the number of times I've been bombarded by web results when I only wanted to search locally. I'm sure many can relate. Previously, you couldn't disable this without messing with the registry.At any rate, changes are most certainly afoot, and I'm excited for this Insider build to roll out in a standard release. It's these 'little' quality of life improvements that could make Windows enjoyable to use once again, if Microsoft keeps in this direction.