It isn’t just your imagination. Modern applications on Windows 11 are significantly larger than they were in the Windows 7 or XP eras. This "app bloat" is the result of a perfect storm involving modern programming practices, security requirements, and the architecture of Windows itself.
Users reporting that apps are "too big" on Windows 11 typically refer to two distinct issues: excessive (app size in GB) or incorrect display scaling (app windows appearing larger than the screen allows). This report outlines the primary technical causes for both scenarios.
Modern software companies want to release their apps on Windows, macOS, and Linux simultaneously. To do this efficiently, they use cross-platform coding languages.
In the old days, if two programs needed the same library file (DLL), they would share one copy in the System32 folder. Modern packaged apps are "sandboxed" for security. This means every app must keep its own private copy of every library it needs. While this prevents "DLL Hell" (where one app breaks another), it results in massive data redundancy on your hard drive.
While not strictly "apps," Windows reserves space proportional to your RAM (often 7GB+) for system stability, which can look like unexplained bloat. 🛠️ How to See What’s Actually Taking Space
Why Are My Apps So Big - Windows 11 __exclusive__
It isn’t just your imagination. Modern applications on Windows 11 are significantly larger than they were in the Windows 7 or XP eras. This "app bloat" is the result of a perfect storm involving modern programming practices, security requirements, and the architecture of Windows itself.
Users reporting that apps are "too big" on Windows 11 typically refer to two distinct issues: excessive (app size in GB) or incorrect display scaling (app windows appearing larger than the screen allows). This report outlines the primary technical causes for both scenarios. why are my apps so big windows 11
Modern software companies want to release their apps on Windows, macOS, and Linux simultaneously. To do this efficiently, they use cross-platform coding languages. It isn’t just your imagination
In the old days, if two programs needed the same library file (DLL), they would share one copy in the System32 folder. Modern packaged apps are "sandboxed" for security. This means every app must keep its own private copy of every library it needs. While this prevents "DLL Hell" (where one app breaks another), it results in massive data redundancy on your hard drive. Users reporting that apps are "too big" on
While not strictly "apps," Windows reserves space proportional to your RAM (often 7GB+) for system stability, which can look like unexplained bloat. 🛠️ How to See What’s Actually Taking Space