Ntsb
The latest Ntsb coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
Grok Build Sent Entire Git Repos to the Cloud — Here’s How to Protect Your Code Now
Grok Build version 0.2.93 silently uploaded entire Git repositories, including commit histories and secrets, to SpaceXAI’s cloud storage. A server-side fix halted the behavior on July 13, but unconfirmed data deletion and lingering client code leave Windows developers at risk. Immediate credential rotation and network restrictions are warranted for any team that used the tool against sensitive repositories.
Three AI Coding Agents Tested on Real Tasks: Which One Fits Your Windows Workflow?
A hands-on comparison of Claude Code, OpenAI Codex, and OpenCode reveals that the best AI coding agent depends on your specific task and constraints. Windows users face unique installation and security considerations, and the article provides a practical guide to choosing, installing, and safely using these tools—whether you're a solo dev, team lead, or admin.
When You Move to Windows 11, Your Default Browser May Not Come With You
Mozilla’s Over the Edge 2.0 report reveals that restoring a Windows 10 backup on Windows 11 can silently reset the default browser to Microsoft Edge, even if another browser was previously set as default. The behavior does not occur in the European Economic Area due to DMA-mandated changes, highlighting how browser preference is preserved only where regulation requires it. Home users and IT administrators planning Windows 11 migrations should explicitly verify and enforce default browser settings to avoid unexpected workflow disruptions.
Make Windows 11 Go Silent on Command: A Closer Look at Focus Sessions
Windows 11 has a built-in Focus tool in the Clock app that automatically silences notifications and hides taskbar badges during timed work sessions. It integrates with Microsoft To Do and Spotify, and offers a daily progress tracker, all without extra apps or subscriptions. This deep dive explains how it works, who benefits most, and how to get started in minutes.
Amazon Kills Kindle for PC: What Every Windows Reader Must Do Before June 30
Amazon retired its legacy Kindle for PC app on June 30, 2026, cutting off access to DRM-protected ebooks. The new Microsoft Store-distributed Kindle app supports Windows 10 and 11 but leaves Windows on ARM users and those with unsynced local collections in a bind. This article covers the practical steps Windows readers must take, the EU battery regulation poised to reshape Kindle hardware, and Kobo’s competing StoryGraph sync, all based on recent reporting.
Steam Machine Gets Windows 11 Drivers: Prepare Your Recovery Plan Before Wiping SteamOS
Valve's official Windows 11 drivers for the Steam Machine remove a key barrier to installing Microsoft's OS on the device, but the lack of dual-boot support and uncertain driver maintenance demand a careful recovery plan. This article explains the performance and usability trade-offs, and provides a step-by-step guide to safely testing Windows 11 while keeping a path back to SteamOS.
Sprinklr Summer Update Connects Microsoft Copilot and Teams to Real-Time Customer Signals
Sprinklr's Summer '26 update introduces a beta MCP connector for Microsoft Copilot, along with Teams integration and AI-powered voice agents, aiming to close the gap between customer insights and real-world action. For Windows-centric organizations, the release offers practical ways to reduce agent context-switching and surface Sprinklr data directly in Copilot. IT teams should test the beta carefully and work with compliance to ensure safe deployment.
Samsung Flex Titanium: The Foldable Display Tech That Could Fix the Crease
Samsung has unveiled Flex Titanium, a new internal display construction designed to make its foldable phones thinner, more durable, and less prone to visible creasing. The technology is expected to debut in the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Z Flip 8, which Samsung is set to reveal at its July 22 Galaxy Unpacked event in London.
Attackers Can Weaponize Windows Bind Links to Bypass EDR — Here’s What You Need to Know
Bitdefender Labs has uncovered three techniques that abuse Windows bind links — a legitimate file-system virtualization feature — to hide malware from endpoint detection. After gaining administrator rights, an attacker can redirect trusted file paths to malicious code, leaving the original files untouched and fooling security tools that rely on paths or hashes. Home users face limited risk, but IT teams should urgently audit their EDR’s handling of file identity and lock down container privileges.
SEGA's Virtua Fighter Crossroads Lands on NVIDIA's RTX Spark, but Your Next Gaming PC Is Still a Waiting Game
NVIDIA and SEGA have announced that Virtua Fighter Crossroads will support RTX Spark, NVIDIA's new Arm-based Windows superchip. The July 2026 event celebrated 30 years of collaboration, but with RTX Spark PCs not due until fall 2026 and the game releasing in 2027, the commitment is more of a long-term signal than an immediate buying guide. For gamers, power users, and IT pros, the practical impact depends on upcoming hardware reviews and real-world game compatibility.
Your 2026 Desktop CPU Guide Is Out of Date: Here’s Why Core Ultra 5 Is the New Default
A recently published guide to the best Intel Core i5 CPUs ignores the March 2026 launch of the Core Ultra 5 250K Plus, a processor that replaces the i5 line for new desktop builds. We explain why the older LGA1700 platform is a dead-end, detail the Core Ultra 5's advantages, and provide clear, up-to-date recommendations for builders and upgraders.
Samsung’s Flex Titanium Could Finally Make the Foldable Crease a Thing of the Past
Samsung’s new Flex Titanium display structure, debuting on the Galaxy Z Fold 8 at July’s Unpacked event, aims to drastically reduce foldable creases and improve durability with a titanium-alloy film and plate that replace the polymer support layer. The technology could make foldables more practical for Windows productivity and may spread to future devices, though independent testing is needed to verify bold claims of stiffness and power efficiency.
Samsung Flex Titanium Promises a Less Visible Crease on Galaxy Z Fold 8: What You Need to Know Before July 22
Samsung has announced Flex Titanium, a new foldable display structure that uses titanium components to reduce the screen crease and improve durability. The technology debuts in the Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Flip 8 at the July 22 Galaxy Unpacked event. While it doesn’t eliminate the crease, it promises a less visible one and better shock resistance, with implications for both everyday users and productivity-focused Windows workflows.