Knowledge Cutoff
The latest Knowledge Cutoff coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Bing’s New Scoreboard Ad Declares Edge the Winner Over Chrome, Obscuring Google’s Links on Windows 11
Microsoft has launched an aggressive Bing ad campaign that places a promotional scoreboard comparing Edge to Chrome above Google’s download links on Windows 11. The ad uses checkmarks and visual design to favor Edge, part of a broader pattern of OS-level nudges that raise ethical and regulatory questions. Users can bypass the nudge, but the tactic highlights the intensifying battle for browser defaults.
Instant Network Speed Test Arrives on Windows 11 Taskbar for Insiders
Microsoft is testing a one-click network speed test directly in the Windows 11 taskbar for Insider builds. The shortcut launches the Bing Speed Test widget in the default browser, offering quick download, upload, and latency readings. While convenient for home users, the web-based approach lacks enterprise controls, offline diagnostics, and auditable logs, making it a handy first step rather than a replacement for professional tools.
Xbox Button Long Press Now Opens Task View in Windows 11 Insider Builds
Microsoft is rolling out a new gesture for Xbox controllers on Windows 11 Insider builds: a long press of the Xbox button now opens Task View, while a short press still launches Game Bar and a sustained hold powers off the controller. The change, live in Dev and Beta channels, aims to make controller-first multitasking seamless, especially for living-room PCs and handhelds like the ASUS ROG Ally.
Windows 10 Support Dies October 14: Your $30 ESU Lifeline and Upgrade Roadmap
Windows 10 support ends October 14, 2025, cutting off security updates for consumer editions. Microsoft offers a one-year Extended Security Updates (ESU) program for $30 or free via backup sync or Rewards points, but enrollment requires a Microsoft account. Upgrading to Windows 11 remains the preferred path, though TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot requirements block many older PCs. Users must act now to avoid security risks.
Windows 11 Quietly Turns Xbox Controller’s Guide Button Into a Multitasking Powerhouse
Microsoft is rolling out a new three-state mapping for the Xbox controller button in Windows 11 Insider builds. A short tap opens Game Bar, a long press triggers Task View, and a sustained hold powers off the controller. The change is designed to make Windows genuinely usable without a keyboard, especially on handheld gaming PCs like the upcoming ROG Xbox Ally.
Windows 11 Insider Builds Add Long-Press Xbox Button to Open Task View, Enhancing Controller Workflows
Microsoft is testing a three-state Xbox button remapping in Windows 11 Insider builds: short tap opens Game Bar, long press opens Task View, and hold still powers off the controller. The change aims to improve controller-friendly navigation for handheld PCs, living-room setups, and accessibility, but relies on careful timing tuning and broad compatibility testing before a wider rollout.
Windows 11 KB5065426 Triggers Install Failures and SMB Sharing Outages — Here’s How to Fix Them
Windows 11 KB5065426, the September 2025 update, is causing widespread installation failures with errors like 0x800F0991 and 0x800F0922, along with broken SMB file sharing. The article details the issues, explains likely causes, and provides a step-by-step fix, with the Media Creation Tool in-place upgrade emerging as the most reliable workaround.
Windows 10's End-of-Life Pushes Users to Ubuntu, Exposing 4 Critical Missing Features
As Windows 10 support ends in October 2025, users switching to Ubuntu encounter four missing desktop conveniences: one-click system reset, automatic system restore, integrated OCR in screenshots, and deep phone integration. While Linux community tools like Timeshift, KDE Connect, and Tesseract can fill these gaps, they require manual setup and lack official support. Canonical could dramatically smooth the migration path by officially integrating these features, preserving Ubuntu's flexibility while closing the convenience gap for everyday users.
Windows Mobile Plans App Will Vanish in 2026 as Microsoft Hands eSIM Sales to Carriers
Microsoft will retire the Mobile Plans app on February 27, 2026, shifting eSIM purchases to carrier websites while Windows Settings handles consent‑based provisioning. Users maintain cellular functionality, but enterprises and travelers must adapt to web‑based activation flows, with QR fallbacks where carriers lag. The change reduces Microsoft’s maintenance burden but shifts privacy responsibilities to carriers, requiring user scrutiny of data handling practices.
Forget Windows 12: Microsoft’s 25H2 Update Is a Stealth Lifecycle Reset
An article about Windows technology and digital innovation.
Windows 10 and 11’s Crucial System Restore Is Often Disabled — Here’s How to Enable It in Under a Minute
System Restore, a built-in Windows feature that creates snapshots of system files and settings, is frequently disabled by default on OEM and fresh installs. This article explains what System Restore does, why it's often off, and provides step-by-step instructions to enable it, along with best practices for balancing disk space and combining it with full backups for comprehensive protection.
Windows 11 Dev Build 26220 Tests Long-Press Xbox Button to Open Task View
Microsoft's latest Windows 11 Insider build introduces a three-state Xbox button mapping that opens Task View on long press, aligning PC controller behavior with Windows handhelds like the ROG Ally. The change is part of a broader push to make Windows more controller-friendly, including a revamped full-screen Xbox app with claimed power savings and upcoming gamepad sign-in. Insiders can test the feature now, though Bluetooth stability issues and variable timing thresholds warrant caution on non-critical systems.
Windows 11 Taskbar Now Launches Bing Speed Test in One Click – But There’s a Catch
Microsoft is testing a new network menu shortcut in Windows 11 Insider previews that launches a Bing-hosted speed test instead of a native diagnostic. While convenient for casual users, the move raises questions about accuracy, telemetry, and enterprise control.