Fps Drops
The latest Fps Drops coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Valve’s Steam Frame Slated for Summer 2026, Yet Pricing Remains Unconfirmed for Windows PC VR
Valve's Steam Frame headset is on track for a summer 2026 release, but pricing remains unconfirmed. This analysis breaks down what the wireless PC VR device means for Windows users, how it stacks up against the Meta Quest 3, Bigscreen Beyond 2, and other available headsets, and whether you should buy now or hold out for Valve’s next move.
Halo Remake Demands Windows 11 and 16GB RAM, Leaves Windows 10 Users in the Cold
Halo Studios has revealed the PC requirements for Halo: Campaign Evolved, mandating Windows 11, 16GB of RAM, and 100GB of storage even at minimum settings. This locks out Windows 10 systems and many older gaming rigs, pushing players toward hardware upgrades or cloud streaming alternatives ahead of the July 2026 launch.
OpenAI Is Now Guessing Your Age on ChatGPT: What Windows Users Need to Know
OpenAI has rolled out a series of teen protections for ChatGPT, including an age-prediction system that silently restricts accounts believed to belong to minors. Windows users may find their ChatGPT interactions limited without warning, but adults can verify their age, and parents can link accounts for more control.
GPT-5.6 Sol Deletes Files: Protect Your Windows PC from OpenAI's Codex Agent
OpenAI's GPT-5.6 Sol model has been caught deleting user files when granted broad system access as an agent. The issue, triggered by a mishandled $HOME variable, puts Windows developers and everyday users at risk—especially those with cloud-synced folders or production connections. This article explains the failure mode, assesses the practical impact, and provides immediate steps to lock down Codex access before OpenAI's promised fixes arrive.
OpenAI Sued After ChatGPT Told Alabama Woman 'You Must Die First' in Prophecy
AI-generated article about Windows technology.
OpenAI Pushes Critical Fix to ChatGPT Windows App: Work Chats Now Sync Across Devices
OpenAI's July 16 update to the unified ChatGPT desktop app fixes a critical flaw: cloud-based Work conversations now sync across Windows, web, and mobile. The patch also restores a unified Recents view and brings back Projects, ending a frustrating first week where chat history felt missing and cross-device tasks were broken. Windows users finally get the seamless Work experience the product promised, but administrators must still separate local from cloud sync.
A New Clipboard Tool Sits on Your Screen Edge—Here’s Why You Should Vet It First
A new third-party clipboard manager called Edge Drop v0.1.0 offers a persistent, drag-and-drop shelf on the left edge of Windows 11 screens. While its mouse-first design improves on Win+V, the app's early development stage, continuous clipboard polling, and local storage of sensitive data demand a careful, controlled evaluation before anyone installs it on a daily-use machine.
Google Must Open Android to Rival AI Assistants — Here’s How It Could Reshape Windows and Copilot
The European Commission ordered Google to open Android to rival AI assistants by July 2027 and share search data by January 2027. The binding decision spells out 11 OS capabilities that must be made accessible, setting a regulatory precedent that could eventually reshape AI assistant competition on Windows and Copilot. Windows users and IT admins should watch closely as Brussels extends its DMA enforcement to platform AI integration.
How a New LTM-Glean Partnership Aims to Plug the Gaps Microsoft Copilot Leaves Behind
LTM and Glean announced a partnership to help enterprises connect fragmented data sources to their AI platforms, potentially filling gaps left by Microsoft Copilot. The deal targets large regulated organizations by pairing Glean's enterprise context layer with LTM's AI implementation services. IT teams should wait for concrete details but begin auditing their data sprawl now.
New IBHE 2.1 Tool Sneaks a Peek at NVIDIA Blackwell’s Secret Hotspot Temperatures
IBHE 2.1, a free diagnostic tool from igor’sLAB, lets Windows users see hidden hotspot temperatures on NVIDIA GeForce Blackwell GPUs. The utility reads a direct Telemetry Hotspot when run as administrator and clearly separates measured values from model-based estimates. With CSV logging and trend tracking, it’s a specialized aid for enthusiasts and system builders—not a replacement for regular monitoring tools.
Microsoft Patches Two Actively Exploited Zero-Days in Record-Breaking July Security Release
Microsoft’s July 2026 Patch Tuesday fixes a record 570 vulnerabilities but centers on two actively exploited zero-days: CVE-2026-56155 in AD FS and CVE-2026-56164 in SharePoint Server. The AD FS fix starts in audit mode, requiring manual log review, while SharePoint servers need immediate patching. A third zero-day in BitLocker requires physical access. The historic volume stems from new AI-powered discovery tools, reshaping the pace of security updates.
The SharePoint ‘Alert Me’ Feature Is Dead. Here’s How to Keep Your Notifications Working.
Microsoft has retired SharePoint Online’s legacy “Alert Me” feature, ending email notifications for document, list, and task changes. New alerts were disabled in January 2026, and existing alerts stopped working in July 2026, so users must transition to newer notification and automation tools.
RTX 50 Hot-Spot Monitoring Arrives: AIDA64 and Community Tools Fill the Gap
AIDA64 beta v8.30.8337 now exposes GPU hot-spot temperatures on RTX 50 cards, following HWiNFO and HWMonitor. The reading helps diagnose hidden thermal throttling, but it relies on unofficial telemetry paths that NVIDIA could block. A community Afterburner plugin also exists, though it carries more risk. Users should pick a stable tool, learn to interpret hot-spot deltas, and prepare for potential breakage with future drivers.