PC

This File Explorer concept explores ideas Windows users may actually want

bekir May 25, 2026 2 min read 177 views

Earlier we examined a series of enthusiast‑crafted visual concepts for Windows, ranging from a polished Windows 11 skin to speculative designs for imagined releases such as Windows 26, Windows 12.2, and a nostalgic Windows Classic Remastered. While some of these proposals divided opinion, they sparked lively debate about how Microsoft’s operating system might evolve in look and functionality.

File Explorer, though essential to the Windows experience, still suffers from notable usability limitations, prompting many users to turn to third‑party file managers. Enthusiast Zee‑Al‑Eid Ahmad (@zeealeid) has unveiled a concept that enables users to select items spread across multiple folders. The proposal adds a bottom‑panel that continuously lists all selected files together with their respective paths, and each entry includes a small “x” icon for quick removal. Currently, Windows 11 restricts multi‑selection to items within the same directory, using drag‑select, Ctrl‑click, or hover‑checkboxes, but cannot span folder boundaries.

Analysis: If implemented, this capability could streamline cross‑folder file handling, reduce reliance on external utilities, and encourage Microsoft to integrate more flexible selection features into its core applications.

Microsoft’s latest design proposal introduces a practical tweak: a pinned file‑transfer dialog that stays front‑and‑center, eliminating the frustration of the window slipping to the background whenever focus shifts.

Beyond the functional fix, the concept reimagines File Explorer with sweeping visual updates—layered transparency, fresh iconography, and new grouping schemes. While the aesthetic overhaul is bold, it’s not the focal point of the designer’s vision, and many reviewers, including ourselves, find the look underwhelming.

As always, a polished concept on paper doesn’t guarantee real‑world adoption. Even though Ahmad’s design packs features that users will likely appreciate, performance constraints or user‑experience trade‑offs may explain why a multi‑trillion‑dollar giant like Microsoft has yet to bring them to life. If you’re intrigued by such visions, you might also want to explore a competing proposal that envisions a File Explorer for Windows 12.

News Source: Neowin

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