Gamepad Api
The latest Gamepad Api coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Budget VPS Gets Serious: IWIHOST.NET’s 2026 Plans Bring KVM, NVMe, and ECC to the Masses
A new independent review of IWIHOST.NET’s 2026 budget VPS plans reveals an aggressive feature set—KVM virtualization, NVMe storage, and ECC memory—at low prices. This article breaks down what the review means for Windows home labbers, developers, and IT pros, and provides a practical checklist for evaluating any budget Windows VPS before you buy.
Mesa 26.2 Brings First GPU-Accelerated AV1 Encoding to WSL via DirectX 12 Prototype
Microsoft engineers merged an initial prototype into Mesa 26.2 on July 6, 2026, enabling GPU-accelerated AV1 video encoding inside WSL using DirectX 12. This marks the first time Linux applications in WSL can leverage dedicated GPU encoders for AV1, promising huge performance gains for content creators, ML engineers, and developers. The feature is still a prototype but signals Microsoft's commitment to full media acceleration parity between WSL and native Windows.
Themia App Reinvents Your Windows Desktop as a Live Productivity Dashboard
XDA Developers highlights Themia, a new app that turns the Windows 10/11 desktop into a live productivity dashboard with configurable widgets for email, calendar, weather, and tasks. It offers a zero‑click alternative to the Windows 11 Widgets panel and harks back to the era of desktop gadgets, but with a modern, privacy‑conscious design.
Android 17 QPR1 Beta 6 Reaches Platform Stability: Key Details for Windows Enthusiasts
Google released Android 17 QPR1 Beta 6 for Pixel devices on July 1, 2026, reaching Platform Stability with build CP31.260618.005 and the June security patch. This milestone finalizes APIs, allowing developers to prepare their apps for the stable release. Windows enthusiasts benefit from improved cross-platform integration, development tools, and enterprise management.
Supreme Court Takes Up Apple’s Contempt Appeal, Joint Motion to Delay Filed
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed on June 30, 2026, to hear Apple's appeal of a contempt ruling in its legal battle with Epic Games, while both companies jointly asked a district court to delay enforcement of the ruling. The case could redefine how app stores handle developer steering and fees, with implications for Windows and other platforms.
Microsoft Swaps Tenor for GIPHY in Windows 11 GIF Picker After API Shutdown
Microsoft's June 23, 2026 preview update for Windows 11 replaces the GIF search backend in the emoji panel from Tenor to GIPHY, following Google's deprecation of the old Tenor API. The switch caused a brief outage and has privacy implications due to GIPHY's Meta ownership, but restores functionality for users. Organizations may need to update firewall rules, and the change highlights the fragility of OS features reliant on third-party APIs.
Supreme Court to Decide How Far Courts Can Rein in Apple's App Store Fees
The Supreme Court will hear Apple's appeal against a contempt ruling that restricts its 27% fee on external App Store payments, an outcome that could set key precedents for how courts enforce injunctions against platform owners. The decision carries significant implications for Windows developers, as it may influence Microsoft's own store policies and the broader legal environment for digital commerce across operating systems.
Microsoft's WSL Containers Preview Lands—But Should Developers Ditch Docker Desktop Yet?
Microsoft released WSL Containers (WSLC) in public preview on June 29, 2026, bringing native container support to WSL2 via wslc.exe. While the preview offers dramatic speed improvements and tight Windows integration, missing orchestration features, network configuration, and tooling gaps make it unsuitable as a wholesale Docker Desktop replacement for most Windows 11 developers. A cautious, test-first approach is recommended, with concrete steps to evaluate WSLC for specific workflows.
Microsoft Launches WSL Containers Public Preview, Letting Windows 11 Run Linux Containers Natively
Microsoft has released WSL Containers into public preview, enabling Windows 11 users to run Linux containers natively through WSL without Docker Desktop. The feature leverages the existing Hyper-V Utility VM, offers near-native performance, and integrates deeply with Windows tools. While still in preview, it promises to simplify container workflows and reduce costs for developers and enterprises alike.
Microsoft Ships Native Linux Container Toolkit in WSL 2.9.3 Preview on Windows 11
Microsoft has released the first public preview of WSL Containers (WSLC) with WSL 2.9.3 on Windows 11, introducing the native `wslc` command-line tool for building, running, and managing Linux containers directly within WSL. The daemonless, rootless design offers a lightweight alternative to Docker Desktop, appealing to developers who prefer terminal workflows and minimal overhead. Early feedback highlights fast container startup times and seamless integration with WSL’s existing kernel, though some production features like Docker Compose support are still in the works.
Samsung SmartThings Developer API Will Require $4.99 Monthly Fee From 2026
Samsung is set to monetize its SmartThings API with a $4.99/month personal developer plan starting October 2026, while current free access continues through Q3 2026. The move introduces commercial tiers for businesses and aims to fund platform improvements, but it has stirred debate in the developer community about the future of open smart home innovation.
UniGetUI 2026.2.2 Completes Avalonia Transition, Arms Windows Users with Snap Layouts and Leaner Packages
UniGetUI 2026.2.2 marks a major milestone with the completion of its migration from WinUI to Avalonia, delivering sharper performance, cross-platform readiness, and new Windows 11 Snap Layouts support. The update also brings a significantly smaller installer package and a revamped logging system tailored for power users, reinforcing its position as the premier GUI for Windows package managers like winget, Chocolatey, and Scoop.
Win11Debloat 06.24.2026 Drops Legacy Custom App-Lists for Safer, Policy-Driven Windows Debloating
Win11Debloat 06.24.2026 has arrived, replacing legacy custom app-list removal with a safer, policy-driven approach. The update introduces detailed risk warnings for aggressive debloat actions, eliminating the fragility of hard-coded package uninstalls. This shift ensures users can strip Windows 10 and 11 of bloatware without breaking system updates or core functionality.