Partnered Health
The latest Partnered Health coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Google Opens Play Catalog to Rival Stores on July 22—With a $5,000 Annual Price Tag
On July 22, Google launches its Play Catalog Access Program, allowing approved third-party Android stores in the U.S. to list apps from Google Play—but downloads still go through Google’s infrastructure, and stores pay $5,000 annually. The change stems from the Epic Games antitrust settlement and raises considerations for Android users, developers, and IT admins managing devices. Windows users see no direct impact, but the shift signals a more open Android ecosystem.
No More Sideloading: Google Play Will Let You Install Rival App Stores on July 22nd
Google Play will begin distributing rival Android app stores in the U.S. on July 22, 2026, ending the sideloading requirement and fulfilling a court order from the Epic Games antitrust case. The change forces Google to host competing marketplaces like the Epic Games Store directly on its platform, while also sharing its app catalog under a new program. Developers must opt out if they don't want their listings shared; users gain easier access to alternative stores but should remain cautious about security. IT administrators should update policies to manage new software installation vectors.
Microsoft Gives Admins a Peek at Trusted Launch and ReFS Boot—With Strict Lab-Only Limits
Windows Server vNext Insider build 29621 debuts Trusted Launch for Hyper-V, ReFS boot, NVMe over Fabrics, and Quick Machine Recovery—but severe restrictions make them lab-only for now. Admins get early looks at future security and storage features, with strict caveats to avoid production use.
Rectify11 v3.2 Promises a Consistent Windows 11 Look — Here’s What You Need to Know Before Installing
Rectify11 v3.2 offers a free way to modernize Windows 11's inconsistent UI by applying a cohesive dark theme, icon pack, and redesigned dialogs. However, its system file modifications can break apps like ESET and reWASD, trigger antivirus false positives, and cause conflicts after Windows updates. Enthusiasts should test on a spare machine, create full backups, and avoid stacking it with other mods; business users should steer clear entirely.
AMD's Ryzen 7 5800X3D Returns as a 10th Anniversary Edition: Is This AM4's Last Great Gaming Hurrah?
AMD has reissued the Ryzen 7 5800X3D as a 10th Anniversary Edition, now selling at UK retailers for £314.99. The chip offers a drop-in gaming upgrade for existing AM4 systems, bringing 3D V-Cache performance without a platform swap. This service-journalism guide explains who should buy, what to check before upgrading, and how the chip stacks up against modern AM5 alternatives.
Samsung Messages Is Dead — Here’s How Windows 11 Users Can Text from Their PC Now
Samsung Messages ended service for U.S. Galaxy phones on July 6, 2026, forcing all Android users onto Google Messages. This article explains what the shutdown means, breaks down the current ways to text from a Windows 11 PC, and provides step-by-step instructions for Android, iPhone, and web-number users to pair safely and unpair securely.
Why a $3 ChromeOS Flex USB Could Brick Your Old PC (Unless You Boot This Way First)
Google and Back Market are selling a $3 ChromeOS Flex USB installer, but experts warn that skipping a live boot compatibility test could permanently wipe your Windows 10 PC and leave it unusable. The article explains what to test, what you lose, and how to safely try the free OS before committing.
KB5101650 Hands IT the Power to Silence Entra SSO Consent Prompts on Windows 11
KB5101650 adds a registry policy that lets IT administrators automatically approve Microsoft Entra single sign-on consent prompts on managed Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2 devices. The July 14, 2026 update, which brings systems to builds 26100.8875 and 26200.8875, reduces repeated authentication prompts for employees using Microsoft applications.
A Designer Just Reimagined Android with Microsoft’s Fluent Design — Here’s What Windows Users Should Know
A fan-made concept shows an Android phone interface designed entirely in Microsoft's Fluent Design language, complete with widgets, lock screen, quick settings, and AI assistant. While it's not an official product, it reignites the idea of a Windows Phone successor built on Android and offers practical inspiration for customizing your own device. We break down what the concept includes, why it matters for Windows enthusiasts, and how you can achieve a similar look today using launchers and widgets.
Server 2025 Build 29621: Trusted Launch for Hyper-V Is Here—Just Don’t Move the VM
Windows Server Insider Preview build 29621 introduces Trusted Launch for Generation 2 Hyper-V VMs, alongside Quick Machine Recovery, ReFS boot, and NVMe-over-Fabrics. The Trusted Launch feature is PowerShell-only and carries heavy restrictions—no live migration, clustering, or boot-integrity checks—marking it as early lab code. The release also contains a critical TLS race condition that can crash LSASS and strict upgrade requirements.
When Windows 11 Blocks Your Camera in Browsers: A Fix-It Guide Beyond the Basics
Windows 11’s layered camera permissions often block browser-based video calls even when the webcam works in the Camera app. This guide explains the permission stack, how it affects home and work users, and a systematic fix for Edge, Chrome, and Firefox.
July Patch Tuesday Drops 570 Fixes and 3 Zero-Day Patches — But Some Dell PCs Are Blocked
Microsoft’s July 2026 Patch Tuesday delivers a record 570 vulnerability fixes, including patches for three zero-day flaws, two of which are actively exploited. However, a compatibility issue with certain Dell Intel-based systems prevents those PCs from receiving the update. The article explains how to verify your Windows 11 build, what the Dell block means, and why the headline CVE count requires context.
Patch Tuesday: Critical Fixes for Exploited SharePoint and AD FS Zero-Days Among 570 Flaws
Microsoft's July 2026 Patch Tuesday addresses a record-breaking 570 vulnerabilities, including two actively exploited zero-days in SharePoint Server and Active Directory Federation Services. Organizations must prioritize patching internet-facing SharePoint farms and AD FS servers, while also addressing critical remote-code-execution flaws in Windows, Office, and more. The release coincides with the end of extended support for SharePoint Server 2016 and 2019, making migration a security necessity.