Korean Semiconductors
The latest Korean Semiconductors coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Bad Windows Update? Your Complete Rollback Toolkit for Windows 10 and 11
Microsoft's April 2025 Patch Tuesday updates are causing boot loops, VPN failures, and BitLocker prompts. This comprehensive guide walks you through four proven methods—Settings, Control Panel, WUSA, and DISM—to uninstall problematic Windows 10 and 11 patches, with practical advice for home users, IT admins, and power users.
The AI Presentation Showdown: 7 Tools That Do the Heavy Lifting for Windows Users
A new guide from Tech All Rounder puts Gamma, Canva, and Microsoft Copilot at the top of seven AI presentation tools. We break down what each tool does for Windows users, who should use which, and how to get started.
Windows Auto-Installs LG and Alienware Companion Apps Without Consent, Then Shows McAfee Pop-Ups
In late June 2026, Windows began automatically installing LG and Alienware monitor apps without user consent, accompanied by intrusive McAfee pop-up ads. The unwanted software raises concerns about Microsoft’s device-metadata pipeline and users’ control over their PCs.
Windows 11 Crosses 1 Billion Users Faster Than Windows 10, Cementing Its Place Before Windows 10’s Sunset
Windows 11 has officially crossed one billion monthly active devices faster than Windows 10 did post‑launch, highlighting rapid adoption driven by new PC sales, the approaching end of Windows 10 support, and AI-focused hardware. Users still on Windows 10 face a critical upgrade decision before the October 2025 security patch deadline.
Your Windows Screen Is Taking a Toll on Your Body—Here’s How to Fight Back
Prolonged screen time on Windows devices is driving a surge in tech neck, digital eye strain, wearable skin irritation, and child development issues. This article breaks down the hidden health costs, explains who is most at risk, and provides step-by-step instructions for using built-in Windows tools—from Night Light to Family Safety—to reduce the damage right now.
Assassin’s Creed Black Flag Returns: 65GB SSD Mandatory, Steam Deck Verified for July 2026 Launch
Ubisoft revealed the PC system requirements for Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced, confirming a mandatory 65GB SSD, 16GB RAM, and DirectX 12. The remaster launches July 9, 2026, and is fully Steam Deck Verified. This article breaks down what the specs mean for desktop and handheld gamers and offers practical upgrade advice ahead of launch.
Purview Endpoint DLP’s New JIT Audit Scoping Will Target Specific Users Starting 2026
Microsoft has announced roadmap item 562991, bringing Just-in-Time (JIT) audit scoping to Microsoft Purview Endpoint Data Loss Prevention (DLP) with user-level include/exclude capabilities, targeting general availability in September 2026. The update will allow administrators to scope audits to specific users or groups, reducing noise and focusing compliance efforts where needed. Organizations can start planning now for more targeted DLP monitoring.
Compact Power: COMMELL LV-6718 Puts Intel Panther Lake-H on a Tiny Desktop Board
COMMELL's new LV-6718 Mini-ITX motherboard brings Intel's Panther Lake-H mobile processors, including the Core Ultra 7 366H, to a standard desktop form factor. This mobile-on-desktop design offers Windows users laptop-like efficiency with the expandability and flexibility of a traditional DIY PC, making it ideal for compact builds, industrial applications, and edge computing.
Intel’s Nova Lake Leak Hints at 12-Core Xe3P Graphics and a Split Between Intel 18A and TSMC Nodes
A leak from Wccftech reveals Intel’s upcoming Nova Lake processors may feature a 12-core Xe3P integrated GPU and a split manufacturing strategy using Intel’s 18A-P for the compute tile and TSMC’s N2P for other components. The report, which is unconfirmed, points to the biggest integrated graphics leap in years but leaves many questions about performance and supply. Windows users should treat the news as a sign of Intel’s ambitions, not as a reason to delay a new PC purchase today.
That Mysterious Disk Hog? Microsoft’s Latest Windows 11 Patch Stops the CapabilityAccessManager File From Stealing Your Free Space
Microsoft's June 23, 2026 preview update (KB5095093) fixes a storage bug in Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2 where the CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal file can grow to tens or hundreds of gigabytes. The article explains how to check for the problem, install the fix, and manually reclaim space if needed.
Microsoft Supercharges Dynamics 365 Field Service Scheduling with Bulk Edit and Map View
Microsoft has announced major updates to the Dynamics 365 Field Service Schedule Board, including bulk move and reassign for bookings, a dedicated map view for geographic scheduling, and the ability to partially cancel bookings. These enhancements aim to save dispatchers time, reduce errors, and improve overall field service efficiency. Organizations should prepare by testing in sandbox environments, reviewing security roles, and updating training materials.
Black Ops 6 Xbox Store Listing Reveals Day-One Game Pass Launch, Round-Based Zombies, and Cross-Gen Confusion
Microsoft's Xbox Store listing for Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 confirms a day-one Game Pass launch for Ultimate and PC subscribers, details the return of round-based Zombies mode, and includes fine-print restrictions on cross-generation access. The revelation marks a strategic shift for the franchise on Windows, with practical implications for Game Pass members, system admins, and anyone who plays across Xbox and PC.
No Sound on Windows 11? Microsoft's Built-In Audio Troubleshooter Now Fixes Most Problems Automatically
Windows 11 audio problems persist in 2026, but Microsoft's Get Help app now resolves nearly 80% of sound failures automatically by scanning output devices, volume levels, privacy permissions, and drivers in one pass. This article explains how the tool works, provides a step-by-step manual fallback checklist, and explores the history and future of Windows audio troubleshooting.