And for the love of stable software: stop ignoring those little runtime updates. Today it’s 8.0.11. Tomorrow it might be 8.0.12 with a fix for your most-hated crash.
If you’ve ever installed a Windows app and got the dreaded “To run this application, you must install .NET” popup—you needed this runtime.
is part of the .NET 8 ecosystem, a Long Term Support (LTS) release. That means Microsoft supports it through November 2026. What’s New in 8.0.11? (Spoiler: No Features) Here’s the first thing to understand: 8.0.11 is a servicing update . It contains zero new APIs or features. .net desktop runtime 8.0.11
If you’ve opened Visual Studio, checked Windows Update, or looked at your installed apps list recently, you might have seen it sitting there: Microsoft .NET Desktop Runtime 8.0.11 .
Let’s pull back the curtain on : what it fixes, why the version number is so specific, and whether you need to rush to install it. First, What Is the .NET Desktop Runtime? To be clear: This is not a framework for building web APIs (that’s ASP.NET Core). The Desktop Runtime specifically runs Windows Forms (WinForms) and Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) applications. And for the love of stable software: stop
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If you manage Windows endpoints via PDQ, SCCM, or Intune, roll this out as a standard security update. If you’re a user, let Windows Update handle it (it should arrive as an optional update this month). If you’ve ever installed a Windows app and
: A small number of apps that rely on undocumented behavior in System.Windows.Forms (specifically custom file dialog handling) may break in 8.0.11. Test first if you have a legacy internal app that hasn’t been updated since 2021. How to Check What You Have Open PowerShell and run: