Linux Filenames
The latest Linux Filenames coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Windows 10’s Settings About Page Gets a Permanent Makeover—Here’s What Changed
Microsoft has quietly redesigned the Windows 10 Settings About page through the November 2024 update (KB5046613), with no supported rollback. The visual refresh modernizes the layout and groups information into cards but does not alter any system data or APIs. Home users may need a moment to adjust, while IT pros should update documentation and scripts—uninstalling the update is the only way to revert, but that removes all security patches and is not recommended.
Microsoft's Bing Search Now Shows a Biased Edge vs. Chrome Comparison—Here's What to Do
Microsoft is displaying a biased comparison chart on Bing that promotes Edge over Chrome. The panel, spotted on July 11, 2026, gives Edge a checkmark for four cherry-picked features while ignoring Chrome's strengths. Users can avoid the manipulation by switching default search engines or using content blockers, and should be aware that the information is not an objective review.
Windows 11 NVMe Drives Still Use a SCSI Mask, but Server 2025 Drops the Disguise
Windows 11 continues to route NVMe SSD commands through a legacy SCSI translation layer using the StorNVMe driver, while the upcoming Windows Server 2025 enables a direct NVMe path via the dormant nvmedisk.sys driver. This architectural split means consumer SSDs still carry a small performance overhead in exchange for broad compatibility, whereas servers will soon enjoy lower latency and higher I/O throughput.
New Guide Diagnoses Common Windows PC Gaming Crashes: Stutters, Memory, and Heat
A recent troubleshooting guide from NoticiasNQN argues that most Windows PC gaming crashes stem from frame pacing issues, memory overclocking instability, GPU heat, and Windows background tasks. The article translates those findings into a practical, step-by-step plan for gamers and IT pros, with specific advice on drivers, XMP/EXPO tuning, undervolting, and system monitoring.
These 3 Free Apps Aim to Replace Your Windows Essentials — Only 2 Succeed
A hands-on Windows evaluation found that open-source apps MarkText and RustDesk are capable replacements for paid writing and remote-access tools, offering solid stability and usability. Ghostty, however, remains less polished than established terminal emulators, so users should adopt the first two while waiting for further development on Ghostty.
Microsoft Axes 3,200 Gaming Jobs—Here’s What It Means for Your Windows PC
Microsoft's elimination of 3,200 gaming jobs and closure of multiple Xbox studios will directly impact Windows PC gamers. Fewer exclusive titles, risks to live-service games, and the fragility of account-bound digital libraries mean you should back up saves, diversify your game stores, and keep a close watch on which studios are affected.
How to pin Task Manager permanently on top in Windows 11 (and a hidden PowerToys trick for any app)
Windows Task Manager can be kept always on top through its own built‑in setting, and Microsoft’s PowerToys offers a system‑wide shortcut (Win+Ctrl+T) to pin any window. This guide details how to enable both, covers a registry trick for IT admins, and explains real‑world use cases for home users, pros, and developers.
What Windows Users Need to Know About the 2026 USB-C Hi-Fi and Physical Media Revival
Gear Patrol’s mid‑2026 gadget guide reveals two key trends for Windows users: USB‑C has become the universal connector for high‑fidelity audio, and physical media like CDs are making a surprising comeback. The article explains what this means for everyday users, audiophiles, and IT professionals, offering practical advice on setting up USB‑C DACs, playing CDs on modern PCs, and getting bit‑perfect playback on Windows.
Chatto 0.4 Delivers Native Windows Builds for Its Open-Source, Self-Hosted Chat Platform
Chatto, a privacy-first group chat tool, has released version 0.4 as open-source software with native Windows support. The self-hosted platform ships as a single executable bundling server and web interface, simplifying deployment for users who prioritize data control.
Google’s ChromeOS 141 Now Shows Battery Health and Can Cap Charging — a Feature Windows Still Lacks
Google's ChromeOS 141 update brings native battery health monitoring and a manual 80% charge limiter, features absent in Windows 11. Chromebook users can now easily extend their battery's lifespan from Settings. For Windows users, this guide covers how to check battery health via command prompt and use manufacturer-specific tools to cap charging, along with the prospects of Microsoft adding similar functionality.
Your Windows PC Has a Hidden Fingerprint That Survives Reinstalls—FBI Docs Reveal
Recent FBI documents have revealed that every Windows installation carries a Global Device Identifier that remains unchanged through OS reinstalls, hardware swaps, and VPN use, effectively acting as a permanent digital fingerprint. This analysis breaks down what the GDID is, its practical impact on home users, enterprises, and developers, and the steps you can take to limit data exposure while regulatory pressure builds.
Blackmagic Releases Free Fairlight Live Mixer for Windows — But ASIO Hardware and ATEM 10.3 Are Mandatory
Blackmagic Design has released the final version of Fairlight Live, a free software audio mixer for Windows. It requires ASIO-compatible audio interfaces and ATEM switchers running firmware 10.3, making it a compelling tool for broadcast professionals already invested in the Blackmagic ecosystem but inaccessible to casual users and streamers without the right hardware.
Silence the Noise: 5 Windows 11 Notification Types You Should Disable Today
Windows 11 bombards users with low-value notifications from tips, setup nudges, browsers, game launchers, and Wi‑Fi alerts. By disabling these five categories, you can dramatically reduce distractions and improve focus. This guide provides step-by-step instructions for each, along with broader Focus Assist tips.