Wsl Update
The latest Wsl Update coverage — news, analysis, and updates from the WindowsNews.AI desk.
UniGetUI 2026.2.4 Rapidly Fixes Vanished WinGet Sources—Don’t Skip This Patch
Devolutions released UniGetUI 2026.2.4, a hotfix for the 2026.2.3 update that broke WinGet package sources. The NativeAOT compilation caused packages to disappear from the interface. The fix restores functionality and adds stability improvements, while retaining the performance gains of the previous release. Users should update immediately to avoid update blind spots.
How to Update Every Windows App with One Command (and Why You Might Not Want To)
Microsoft's built-in WinGet tool can update most Windows apps with a single command, but it comes with significant caveats. This guide explains how to use `winget upgrade --all` safely, the limitations around version detection and package sources, and how home users, power users, and IT administrators can incorporate it into their maintenance routines without breaking critical applications or silently accepting risky agreements.
UniGetUI's Big Performance Boost Just Broke Package Sources—Here's the One-Click Fix
UniGetUI 2026.2.3 introduced significant performance improvements but broke WinGet source visibility, PowerShell installation scope, and NativeAOT startup. Hotfix 2026.2.4 released the next day repairs all three regressions. Everyday users, power users, and admins should update immediately to restore full functionality and enjoy the speed gains without disruption.
Forget Manual Updates: How Microsoft’s Winget One-Liner Can Refresh Your Apps in Seconds
Microsoft’s built-in WinGet package manager lets Windows users update thousands of apps with a single `winget upgrade --all` command. This article explains how it works, its limitations, and step-by-step guidance for home users, power users, and IT admins to streamline software maintenance securely and efficiently.
UniGetUI’s NativeAOT switch: Why your Windows package manager just got snappier
UniGetUI 2026.2.3 arrived on July 14 with NativeAOT enabled by default, promising faster launch times and lower memory usage. The update also smooths scrolling, reduces GPU animations, fixes window-resize bugs, and adds manual operation control. Home users get a snappier experience, while IT admins should test the new build before broad deployment.
WSL's New 32MB Reserve Prevents Total Freezes During Runaway Workloads
Microsoft has added a 32 MiB memory and 0.01 CPU reserve in WSL 2 to prevent the entire Linux session from freezing during out-of-memory events. The change, built on cgroup v2, ensures that a runaway workload can crash itself without taking down WSL's critical infrastructure, saving developers from forced shutdowns and lost work.
Windows 11 Can Now Create 7z and RAR Files—Here’s How to Use Its New Archive Tools
Windows 11's built-in archive tools have quietly evolved far beyond the old ZIP folder. Thanks to updates first introduced in KB5039302 and refined in version 24H2, you can now create 7z, RAR, and TAR archives directly from File Explorer, alongside traditional ZIP files. This guide explains what changed, what it means for home users and IT professionals, and how to put the expanded toolkit to work—with or without third-party software.
HackerNoon’s 58 Most-Read Bash Posts Are a Goldmine for WSL Users—If You Avoid the Traps
HackerNoon's Learn Repo published a ranked list of 58 Bash articles on July 12, 2026, sorted by reader engagement rather than technical review. For Windows users running WSL, the collection offers a discovery tool for scripting patterns and automation ideas, but outdated guides and the popularity-based ranking demand cautious, informed use. The article explains what's inside, who it's for, and how to safely integrate these resources into a modern WSL workflow.
Debian 13.6 Ships With 2019 GeoIP Database, Breaking Location Services for Dual Booters
Debian 13.6, a point release for the Trixie testing branch, rolls back its GeoIP database to 2019, potentially breaking location services for dual-booters, WSL users, and server admins. The update also adds working Secure Boot support and fwupd firmware integration, offering mixed but significant news for Windows users who work with both operating systems.
Win11Debloat 07.11.2026 Introduces 'WhatIf' Preview Mode and Blocks Unwanted Driver Apps
Win11Debloat 07.11.2026 introduces a -WhatIf preview mode that simulates changes before they are made, and a -BlockDriverApps switch to prevent automatic installation of manufacturer driver software. The open-source PowerShell script also refines app removal lists, AI feature controls, and logging, making it safer and more flexible for Windows 10 and 11 users and administrators.
Win11Debloat Update Gives Users a Safety Net: Preview Bloatware Removal Before It Happens
Win11Debloat version 07.11.2026 introduces a WhatIf preview for Get.ps1, allowing users to see exactly which bloatware would be removed before making any changes. The update also adds new controls for Windows notification behavior and automatic driver companion apps, giving users finer-grained customization and a safer debloating experience.
Stop WSL ‘Filename Syntax Incorrect’ Errors with These Cross-Platform Path Tricks
The 'filename syntax incorrect' error in WSL occurs when Windows-style paths are passed to Linux commands without translation. This article explains the root cause, provides three reliable fixes—using wslpath, manual path conversion, and the \\wsl$\ share—and offers practical advice for users, developers, and IT pros to avoid the error in their workflows.
Leaked Windows 11 Build 26300.8687 Tests Unified Reboot: .NET, Drivers, and Firmware Apply with a Single Restart
A leaked Windows 11 build reveals Microsoft testing a feature that bundles .NET and driver updates with the monthly cumulative update, requiring only a single restart. Firmware updates remain separate for now. The report suggests enterprises should prepare to merge driver and .NET servicing into their regular patching cycles.