Qilin
The latest Qilin coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
How a Windows language change can lock you out—and the simple fix most users miss
Changing your Windows display language can silently switch your keyboard layout, locking you out of your own machine. This analysis unpacks why the trap exists, how to avoid it, and when to use a PowerShell cmdlet to apply language settings system-wide, offering a clear path through the confusing maze of display language, input methods, and regional formats in Windows 11 and 10.
When Apple Magic Mouse Meets Windows: Stop the Disconnects and Erratic Scrolling
Apple’s Magic Mouse is beloved for its design, but on Windows it often misbehaves—dropping connections, stalling the cursor, or refusing to scroll. This guide merges Apple’s official hardware troubleshooting with Windows-specific Bluetooth pairing, driver tricks, and third-party tools that restore smooth control. From power-cycling and cleaning the sensor to installing Magic Utilities for gesture support, it’s the complete playbook for Windows users wrestling with a stubborn Magic Mouse.
Samsung's Flex Titanium Display Could Finally Solve the Foldable Crease Problem
Samsung introduced Flex Titanium, a foldable display structure with a titanium plate and micro-perforations that aims to dramatically reduce screen crease. The technology debuts at Galaxy Unpacked on July 22 in London, likely in the next Galaxy Z Fold and Flip. The innovation could make foldables more durable and appealing for Windows users who rely on Phone Link, DeX, and multi-screen workflows.
A Used Type Cover 2 Can Revive Your Old Surface—Here’s What You Need to Know Before Buying
A used Microsoft Type Cover 2, compatible only with the original Surface RT, Surface 2, Surface Pro, and Surface Pro 2, has appeared on a Brazilian marketplace, offering a rare chance for owners of those aging devices to replace a worn-out keyboard. This article details what the listing actually says, which devices it works with (and the many it doesn’t), the history of why these covers are scarce, and a practical checklist for buying a used Type Cover safely.
Rufus Can’t Save That Old PC: Windows 11 24H2’s Hard CPU Block Explained
Windows 11 24H2 introduces a hard CPU block that prevents booting on systems lacking POPCNT and SSE4.2 instructions, a barrier that workarounds like Rufus can't bypass. The restriction only affects pre-2008 processors, but it sets a precedent for future hardware-enforced blocks. Users with affected PCs must stay on older Windows versions, switch to Linux, or upgrade hardware.
Cleaner Town Halls Ahead: Microsoft Splits Attendee and Crew Invites in Teams
Microsoft is developing a feature that will allow Teams Town Hall organizers to send separate invitations to attendees and event crew, tracked as Roadmap ID 476488 and planned for September 2026. The change promises cleaner event management for corporate communications and IT administrators, eliminating manual workarounds that have been required to keep production details out of attendee-facing communications.
Facebook Videos Still Breaking in Edge, Chrome on Windows? Here’s the 2026 Fix Guide
Facebook video playback in Windows browsers continues to fail in 2026, with symptoms including blank players and spinning buffering icons. A comprehensive troubleshooting guide from Technobezz covers quick fixes like reloading and cache clearing, as well as deeper repairs involving extensions, graphics settings, and network resets for Edge, Chrome, and Firefox users.
Microsoft Gives IT Admins Extra Six Months to Replace Exchange Online PowerShell Password Scripts
Microsoft has delayed the removal of the -Credential parameter from Exchange Online PowerShell modules to December 2026, giving IT teams six extra months to migrate unattended scripts to certificate-based or managed-identity authentication. The client-side delay is a response to admin feedback, but a future server-side cutoff means the reprieve is temporary. Organizations should use the extra time to audit scripts, test app-only auth, and plan for certificate lifecycle management before the harder deadline arrives.
Razer’s Pikachu and Eevee Collection Is a $320 Pink Makeover for Your Gaming Desk
Razer and The Pokémon Company have released a four-piece peripheral set themed around Pikachu and Eevee. The wired collection includes a headset, keyboard, mouse, and mouse pad, all identical in performance to their standard Razer counterparts. Priced at $319.96 for the full bundle, it’s available now in the US through Target and Razer, and in other regions via Razer’s online store.
Xbox Series Sales Crash to Just 2.5 Million in 2026 Forecast, Cementing Microsoft’s Pivot Beyond Consoles
S&P Global Market Intelligence forecasts Xbox Series X|S shipments will plummet to just 2.5 million units in 2026, the steepest drop among major consoles, amid rising component costs and a shift in Microsoft's gaming strategy toward a Windows-centric ecosystem. The decline reinforces that the future of Xbox is no longer tied to traditional hardware but to services like Game Pass, cross-platform play, and the upcoming Project Helix—which may bridge the gap between console and PC. Windows gamers, meanwhile, stand to benefit as Microsoft doubles down on PC releases and cloud streaming.
When Instagram Breaks on Windows: The Complete Repair Manual That Goes Beyond Quick Fixes
When the Instagram app stops working on Windows, the fix isn’t always obvious. This guide walks through the real causes—from cache corruption to permission glitches—and provides a step-by-step repair sequence for Windows, iPhone, and Android without unnecessary reinstalls.
Windows 11 VPNs Hide ISP Snooping, Not Microsoft Tracking—Here’s How to Close the Gap
A new Hardware Secrets analysis reveals that Windows 11 VPNs protect browsing from ISPs but leave Microsoft tracking intact through account, Edge, and diagnostic data. This article explains the exposure points, sets practical expectations, and provides a seven-step checklist for hardening privacy beyond the VPN tunnel.
8BitDo FlipPad Turns Your Phone Into a Game Boy for $30, Ships July 30
8BitDo's FlipPad is a $29.99 clip-on USB-C controller for iPhones and Android phones that ships July 30. It offers a pocketable, Game Boy-inspired design with direct wired connection for low-latency gaming, though it lacks Windows support and pass-through charging. This article breaks down who should buy it, how it compares to alternatives, and what to know before pre-ordering.