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Showing posts with the label customization

The Forgotten Backbone: Why Great Drivers Still Matter in 2025

Plug and Pray: Why Bluetooth Audio on Windows Is Worse Than a Decade Ago It’s 2025. I can use AI to summarize a YouTube video, my PC can generate photorealistic images from a sentence, and yet… it still takes me up to two minutes to connect a Bluetooth headset to Windows 11. Ten years ago, it was practically instant. Today, it’s “please wait,” “connecting,” “something went wrong,” or just dead silence. How did we end up here? Somewhere along the line, driver development went from being the rock-solid backbone of Windows to a backburner task. Instead of focusing on stability and real hardware compatibility, the big effort seems to go into UI tweaks, shiny new apps, and—heaven help us—more media control buttons. Meanwhile, the basics have started to fall apart. Here’s the thing: Drivers matter. Without good drivers, we’re back to the dark ages—bits and bytes, no sound, no network, no webcam, no fun. Instead of another minor UI refresh or yet another built-in app, I’d love to see Micros...

Reclaiming Windows: A Developer's Call for Real Customization

hi Satya, It’s time to make Windows 11—or at the very least, the next version of Windows—the best one yet. Right now, it feels like we’ve taken a step backward, with the taskbar being the most glaring issue. In Windows 10, the taskbar had evolved over 30 years into something truly functional. But with just one release, all of that progress was discarded. We were taken back to square one. And somehow, that was considered okay? It’s not too late. Let’s listen to the people who use and build on Windows every day. Let’s bring back what worked, fix what didn’t, and build an OS that developers and power users genuinely love. .. Satya Nadella, reflecting on your original vision as Microsoft CEO, reaffirms a commitment to innovation, learning, and user empowerment. In response to growing feedback from developers and users, you need to acknowledges key concerns with Windows 11—most notably, the taskbar redesign, which many view as a step backward in usability and productivity. Developers are ...