Amazon Leo Satellite
The latest Amazon Leo Satellite coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Sony Pulls Plug on PlayStation Game Discs from 2028: Digital Codes and Consumer Backlash
Sony will stop producing physical PlayStation game discs in January 2028, shifting entirely to digital codes. The decision has ignited fierce backlash over lost ownership rights, resale value, and game preservation, while highlighting the industry's broader march toward an all-digital console future that parallels but also diverges from the PC gaming landscape familiar to Windows enthusiasts.
Windows 11 Update KB5095093 Tames Runaway Database File That Devoured SSD Space
Microsoft’s optional update KB5095093 resolves a bug that caused the CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal file to grow excessively, consuming gigabytes of disk space. The fix forces proper database checkpointing, shrinking bloated files and preventing future runaway growth. Users on Windows 11 24H2 can install the preview now or wait for the July 2026 Patch Tuesday rollout.
Valorant’s 2026 Minimum Specs Stick to 4GB RAM, But TPM 2.0 Is Now Non-Negotiable
Valorant's 2026 PC requirements keep a remarkably low 4GB RAM minimum but now mandate TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot for all Windows 10 and 11 systems, forcing Vanguard anti-cheat to rely on hardware-backed security. Players on older PCs must upgrade or be locked out, while the industry watches to see if this hardware gate becomes the new standard for competitive gaming.
Valve’s 2026 Steam Machine Ships, But SteamOS Is the Real Windows Alternative
Valve’s revived Steam Machine began shipping in late June 2026, but the hardware is secondary to the real story: SteamOS 4.0 has matured into a legitimate Windows alternative for PC gaming. With a polished living‑room experience, a vast Proton‑compatible library, and a growing ecosystem of third‑party devices, Valve is building a post‑Windows future one living room at a time.
Eden vs Ryubing: The Nintendo Switch Emulators Dividing Windows Users in July 2026
Eden and Ryubing represent two distinct paths for Nintendo Switch emulation on Windows in July 2026: Eden delivers rapid, cutting-edge updates and high performance for demanding hardware, while Ryubing prioritizes stability, accuracy, and broad compatibility. This article compares features, performance, community support, and legal considerations to help users decide which emulator fits their needs.
Windows 11 Insider Build 26300.8758 Brings Native Taskbar Size Setting to Testers
Windows 11 Insider Experimental Preview Build 26300.8758 has introduced a long-awaited native taskbar size setting, allowing users to switch to a compact mode without hacks. The feature addresses one of the most persistent user complaints since Windows 11’s launch and could make its way to stable releases later this year if testing goes well.
HALO TOUCH V2: The Rotary Hub That Brings AIDA64 Sensor Panel and Touch Control to Your Windows Desktop
Innoelement's HALO TOUCH V2 combines a 3.5-inch touch screen, a physical rotary dial, a USB hub, dual microSD slots, and Fast Ethernet into a single desktop device. It functions as an AIDA64 sensor panel for real-time system monitoring, offers customizable controls for creative apps, and includes a USB power meter—all without proprietary drivers on Windows 10 and 11.
Microsoft Finally Lets Windows 11 Users Move the Taskbar and Shrink Icons in New Insider Experimental Build
Microsoft is testing the return of movable taskbar and smaller icon modes in Windows 11 Insider Experimental Builds 26300.8493 and 26300.8758. The feature, available in the Experimental channel from May 2026, allows users to reposition the taskbar to any screen edge and toggle compact buttons. Although not guaranteed for public release, the polished settings page suggests the company is serious about restoring long-requested customization options.
Google Chrome’s Hidden Voice Typing Appears on Windows 11—But Dictation Hits a Wall
Google Chrome’s built-in voice typing has been spotted in Canary builds on Windows 11, but the “Start dictation” command fails to produce any text. The feature likely uses Google’s on-device speech engine and could rival Microsoft’s native dictation once completed, though privacy and technical hurdles remain.
Rufus 4.15 Released: Critical Fixes for Windows 11 24H2 Install Failures and Snapdragon X Boot Loops
Rufus 4.15, released on June 30, 2026, fixes three critical bugs: silent Windows installation failures at 75% progress, boot crashes on Snapdragon X ARM64 devices, and a broken Windows 11 24H2 requirement bypass. The update replaces a faulty UEFI:NTFS driver, corrects an ARM64 architecture check, and restores TPM/CPU bypass functionality. All Windows users who create USB install media should upgrade immediately.
Brave Software Ships Brave Origin: The Bare-Bones Chromium Browser for Privacy Purists
Brave Software released Brave Origin on June 4, 2026, a minimalist Chromium browser that removes all extras like Brave Rewards, crypto wallet, and AI assistant, focusing solely on speed and privacy. Available immediately on Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS, the browser boasts a 40% smaller footprint and faster performance while retaining Brave's ad-blocking Shields. The launch addresses long-standing community demands for a stripped-down, no-bloat service environment.
ReactOS Makes Historic Leap With First NT6 System Call, Opening Door to Vista-Era Compatibility
ReactOS merged its first NT6 system call, NtGetCurrentProcessorNumberEx, marking the open-source project’s initial move beyond Windows XP/2003 compatibility toward Vista-era support. The stub function currently returns a not-implemented status but opens the door for future implementations needed to run modern applications. This milestone reflects renewed ambition to make ReactOS a viable Windows alternative after years of stagnation.
Edge Will Soon Rescue Broken Sites With One-Click Privacy Adjustments
Microsoft Edge plans to launch an in-context troubleshooting feature in August 2026 that detects when a website breaks due to strict privacy settings and offers one-click fixes. Instead of guessing which setting to change, users will see a prompt to adjust tracking prevention or review site permissions right from the broken page, streamlining the fix for common compatibility issues.