English In Malaysia
The latest English In Malaysia coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Pre-Release SSD Firmware, Not Windows 11 KB5063878, Behind Drive Disappearances
A forensic analysis reveals that SSDs disappearing after Windows 11 update KB5063878 were likely caused by pre-release engineering firmware, not a systemic Windows bug. Vendor testing and community work show production firmware is unaffected, with only a small number of drives exposed to a latent controller flaw triggered by the update.
Ditch Windows 10? These 8 Linux Distros Feel Just Like Home
Windows 10 support ends October 14, 2025, spurring many users to consider Linux. ZDNET and community forums highlight eight Windows-like distributions—KDE Neon, Linux Mint, Zorin OS, blendOS, AnduinOS, RefreshOS, Bazzite, and Q4OS—that minimize migration friction with familiar interfaces and broad compatibility. A practical checklist and realistic appraisal of gaming and app support help users transition smoothly.
The Accidental 5,000 FPS Pinball Bug That Taught Microsoft a Lasting Timing Lesson
A former Microsoft engineer reveals that his port of Space Cadet Pinball for Windows NT contained a rendering loop with no frame-rate cap, causing it to consume an entire CPU core on modern hardware. The bug was later fixed by Raymond Chen with a simple 100 fps limiter, turning the incident into a lasting lesson about explicit timing design and software longevity.
Why Windows 11 Power Users Still Rely on a 15-Year-Old 'God Mode' Trick
God Mode is a Windows shell trick that aggregates hundreds of Control Panel and administrative tools into one searchable folder, offering power users a faster way to navigate Windows 11’s fragmented settings. This article explains how to enable it, why it remains essential for system management, and the risks to consider when using it in production environments.
Windows 11 Free Upgrade Preserves Licenses, but Retail vs. OEM Is the Real Trap
Migrating from Windows 10 to 11 is free for eligible PCs and usually keeps your activation intact thanks to Microsoft’s digital license system. However, the license type (retail vs. OEM), major hardware changes like a motherboard swap, and the recent closure of the Windows 7/8 upgrade loophole can block activation. Understanding these rules and linking your license to a Microsoft account are essential to avoiding unexpected costs.
How a Missing Frame Limiter Made Windows Pinball a CPU-Core Hog—and the 100 FPS Fix That Saved It
A missing frame limiter in Space Cadet Pinball caused the game to consume an entire CPU core on modern hardware. Windows engineer Raymond Chen discovered the bug and fixed it by capping the frame rate at 100 FPS, slashing CPU usage to near 1%. The story is a cautionary tale about legacy code, hardware evolution, and the power of small, pragmatic fixes.
6 Free Windows Apps That Break the Built-In App Bottleneck
Windows built-in apps serve basic needs, but power users quickly encounter limits like missing scrolling capture, a 25-item clipboard that clears on restart, slow file search, and limited PDF editing. This guide examines six free alternatives—ShareX, Ditto, Everything, ImageGlass, PDFgear, and VLC—that overcome these bottlenecks and deliver measurable productivity gains, supported by official documentation and community feedback.
Microsoft Azure Hit by Latency as Red Sea Cable Cuts Disrupt Asia-Middle East
Multiple undersea fibre-optic cables in the Red Sea were cut on 6 September 2025, causing widespread Internet disruptions across South Asia and the Middle East and forcing Microsoft Azure to reroute traffic. The outage affected major data trunk routes (including SMW4 and IMEWE), leading to elevated latency and slower performance for cloud-connected enterprises and everyday users, with issues such as sluggish web pages, choppy calls, and application timeouts.
Windows 11’s Default Apps Are Slowing You Down: Here Are 6 Free Replacements to Supercharge Your Workflow
Windows 11’s built-in utilities are fine for casual use, but power users often hit limits with the Snipping Tool, Clipboard History, Microsoft Edge PDF viewer, Windows Search, Photos, and Media Player. This article dives into six free, feature-packed replacements—ShareX, Ditto, PDFgear, Everything, ImageGlass, and VLC—that deliver faster performance, deeper functionality, and greater privacy. We also provide a migration checklist and weigh the security and administrative tradeoffs.
SSD Panic Debunked: Phison Says Engineering Firmware, Not KB5063878, Caused Windows 11 Drive Failures
Phison's investigation reveals that recent Windows 11-related SSD failures were caused by early engineering firmware and beta BIOS versions used by reviewers, not Microsoft's KB5063878 and KB5062660 updates. After thousands of test hours, the controller maker could only replicate issues on pre-release firmware, while consumer drives remained unaffected. The incident underscores the critical importance of firmware provenance and reproducible testing in hardware journalism.
Copilot Studio Adds Near-Real-Time Blocking for AI Agent Actions in Public Preview
Microsoft's Copilot Studio now offers near-real-time runtime protection in public preview, allowing enterprises to block or approve AI agent actions before execution. The external monitor-based system integrates with Microsoft Defender and third-party tools, delivering auditable, inline enforcement while introducing new latency, privacy, and operational risks that require careful rollout.
Windows 11 Insider Build 26120.5790: AI Dictation, Expanded Camera Effects, and Intel Rollout Priority
Windows 11 Insider Build 26120.5790 introduces fluid AI dictation that auto-corrects speech on Copilot+ PCs and expands Windows Studio Effects to external cameras, but an Intel-first driver rollout and a Microsoft-account-required File Explorer tweak have drawn mixed community reactions.
Rockstar Workers Launch Union Recognition Campaign as GTA 6 Launch Looms
Rockstar Games employees are pushing for union recognition through the UK’s IWGB ahead of GTA VI’s rumored 2026 release, signaling a growing labor movement in the video game industry. The campaign aims to address historical crunch issues and could set a precedent for other studios, with implications for PC and console releases alike.