Windows

Winsage
June 2, 2026
Microsoft launched Windows 8 on June 1st, 2011, which faced backlash for its touch-centric design. The initial working title was "modern," leading to confusion with new components labeled "Mo." In response to criticism, Microsoft released Windows 8.1 a year later, reintroducing the classic desktop environment while retaining some contentious design choices. Windows 8 was officially discontinued in January 2016, but it continues to be used in various sectors, including hospitals, supermarket checkouts, gas stations, industry machinery, and government agencies. Some private users still prefer Windows 8 or 8.1, despite initial dissatisfaction. Government agencies often use proprietary firewalls to mitigate security risks associated with outdated software, and users are advised not to connect Windows 8 systems to the internet.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
ARM showcased its latest innovations at Computex, highlighting advancements in mobile and embedded computing that enhance performance and prioritize energy efficiency. The company unveiled new processor designs for artificial intelligence, automotive, and IoT sectors, focusing on superior processing power with low power consumption. Notable announcements included the ARM Cortex-X3, aimed at improving mobile gaming and streaming experiences with enhanced graphics performance. ARM also announced partnerships to foster a robust ecosystem for seamless integration of its technologies. The new designs incorporate advanced AI capabilities for smarter devices, are tailored for automotive safety and connectivity, and are optimized for IoT applications.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
The COSMIC desktop environment, built on Rust and Wayland, is introducing a "Frosted Glass" appearance reminiscent of Windows Aero. System76 CEO Carl Richell announced that the feature is nearing completion and aims to balance aesthetics and functionality, allowing users to adjust the effect's prominence or disable it. Development screenshots have been shared, and the Frosted Glass effect will be integrated into the COSMIC compositor and libcosmic toolkit, with an expected release in the near future.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
Microsoft's annual developer conference, Build 2026, will take place on June 2-3 in San Francisco and online, featuring a keynote by CEO Satya Nadella. The event is expected to unveil the Copilot "super app," a new reasoning AI model, and a developer-focused Windows 11 experience. The agenda includes topics such as developer tools, cloud platforms, responsible AI practices, and Windows development insights. Attendees can anticipate new software development kits (SDKs), innovative model access patterns, and enhancements to Windows developer ergonomics.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
NVIDIA has launched the DGX Station for Windows, a deskside system designed for extensive AI workloads on Windows machines, marking a shift from traditional Linux-based systems. It features the NVIDIA GB300 Grace Blackwell Ultra Desktop Superchip, capable of executing AI models with up to 1 trillion parameters. The system supports model training, fine-tuning, inference, data science, and multi-agent development, allowing hundreds of agents to run concurrently. A key feature is the NVIDIA OpenShell on Windows, which provides a secure runtime environment for autonomous agents. The DGX Station integrates with existing enterprise management frameworks and extends Windows security and compliance tools. Its hardware architecture includes a Blackwell Ultra GPU, a 72-core Grace CPU, up to 748GB of coherent memory, and networking capabilities of up to 800Gb/s. It is designed for individual specialists or collaborative teams and can be paired with an NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell Workstation GPU. The DGX Station will be available through vendors like ASUS, Dell Technologies, GIGABYTE, HP, MSI, and Supermicro.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
Microsoft and Nvidia have launched a new series of Windows PCs powered by the Nvidia RTX Spark platform, featuring devices from manufacturers like Surface, Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and MSI. The RTX Spark platform delivers up to 1 petaflop of AI performance, with up to 20 Arm-based CPU cores, 6,144 Blackwell RTX cores, and 128GB of unified memory. Microsoft has optimized Windows for this architecture, enhancing scheduling, power management, and memory handling. The new workload profile scheduling feature optimizes task distribution across the cores, while the Microsoft Power and Thermal Framework improves performance, battery life, and heat management. Windows' support for unified memory has been enhanced, allowing for larger AI models and demanding creative tasks. Microsoft's Prism emulator for x86 applications has been optimized for RTX Spark systems, improving compatibility and speed. Creative applications like Blender, DaVinci Resolve, and Adobe Photoshop are supported, along with MATLAB for technical users. Gaming support includes native anti-cheat software and compatibility with popular titles such as League of Legends and Valorant. The new systems are categorized under Microsoft's Copilot+ PC line, which combines AI processing with enhanced graphics capabilities. Devices showcased include Microsoft's Surface Laptop Ultra and models from Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and MSI. Microsoft also plans to scale Windows to the Nvidia DGX Station for Windows, enabling larger AI models and workstation-class workloads. The initiative aims to unify AI workloads across consumer PCs, creator laptops, and workstations, allowing users to run larger models locally and integrate AI computing into their workflows.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
Pavan Davuluri, President of Microsoft’s Windows + Devices division, announced that Windows 12 will not be released at Build 2026, dispelling speculation about the new OS. Microsoft is shifting focus towards enhancing high-performance gaming and integrating local AI capabilities into the Arm architecture, in collaboration with Nvidia and MediaTek. The Nvidia N1X Arm processor will debut in the Surface Laptop Ultra, which features a powerful NVIDIA Blackwell RTX GPU and up to 128GB of unified memory, designed for demanding tasks like AI creation and 3D rendering, with 1 petaflop of AI compute power.
Winsage
June 2, 2026
NVIDIA has introduced the RTX Spark, an Arm-based processor codenamed N1X, designed to run all Windows applications seamlessly in collaboration with Microsoft. The processor features up to 128GB of unified memory, native support for AI agents, and is integrated with NVIDIA’s graphics stack. The Surface Laptop Ultra is among the first devices to utilize this processor. Jensen Huang, NVIDIA's CEO, claims the RTX Spark can run 100% of NVIDIA’s software stack and has been meticulously optimized for compatibility with Windows applications. While many popular applications and games now run natively on Windows on Arm, NVIDIA has not yet released performance benchmarks for the RTX Spark. The "Prism" emulator allows Windows apps designed for x86 processors to run on Arm hardware through real-time translation, enhancing performance. Recent updates to Windows 11 have improved support for various x86 extensions, increasing compatibility for applications.
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