Windows 11 lets you run a network speed test right from the taskbar now – how to try it

Bing network speed test

Microsoft

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ZDNET’s key takeaways

  • Windows 11 is testing a network speed test that you run from the taskbar.
  • The speed test icon takes you to the Bing website.
  • For now, you need a Windows 11 Insider build to use the feature.

Running a network speed test is a helpful way to determine if you’re getting the speed promised by your internet provider. Normally, you have to trigger such a test from a third-party web page like Ookla’s Speedest or Testmy.net. But Microsoft is adding an option to Windows 11 in which you can launch a speed test directly from the taskbar.

Now available for Windows 11 insiders in the current Canary, Dev, and Beta builds, the new speed test takes you to Microsoft’s Bing toolbox site to trigger it, as spotted by X account phantomofearth. After measuring your connection, the results show you the download and upload speeds as well as the latency, which checks for any delays in the travel time of your data.

Also: How to upgrade your ‘incompatible’ Windows 10 PC to Windows 11 – for free

That certainly sounds like a handy, time-saving feature. But it’s not quite all it could be.

First, Bing certainly isn’t bad as a speed tester. I compared its results with those of other online test sites, and they were generally similar. But I typically rely on Ookla’s Speedtest, which is one of the most popular and reliable tools and one that provides a range of network data.

Second, the taskbar icon simply takes you to the Bing website, where you have to manually run the tool. The Bing speed test even uses Ookla for the backend processing. Far more useful would have been an internal feature or app that measures your internet speed and then delivers the results directly within Windows.

Also: How to clear the cache on your Windows 11 PC (and why you shouldn’t wait to do it)

Several Microsoft Store speed test apps will run within Windows, including Speedtest by Ookla. Here, you launch the test, and Ookla displays the results not only in the app but in a notification. If other developers can provide this type of integrated speed test, then surely Microsoft could have done the same.

Still, the option should prove handy for people who may not be aware of Ookla’s Speedtest or other third-party testing sites and tools. Since it’s now being tested with Windows insiders, it should eventually reach all Windows 11 users. I’d just like to see Microsoft turn this into an internal tool rather than one that has to transport people to Bing.

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