Recommended Posts

it will look a little different when windows 8 RTMs.

You can see how most pro apps don't use glass. They have their own UI. Now they can actually simplify it to make it more attractive and consistent with the rest of the system.

I am already seeing some apps go the Zune UI way.

I'm still seeing folks going on and on about the tutorial coming in Windows 8. Apparently, they've forgotten about this guy:

and don't forget the tutorial/interactive video thing that XP had

It was pretty much exactly like that (using the available tech at the time of course). However it did force developers to immediately start developing for OS X rather than letting "Classic" linger for ages, something I'm afraid will happen with the desktop on Windows. OS X Cheetah was released in 2001, the same year Microsoft made an Office version for it available.

I was using safari in full screen today and had to switch back-forth once (felt exactly same as switching between metro apps/desktop on Win8) and that got me thinking that the Classic or Legacy windows apps are not going anywhere. Microsoft will just make them run full screen in Windows 8+ (either a service pack or in 9 etc.) without additional features that WinRT apps enjoy.

It's amazing how much similar the full screen mode on OS X Lion feels like Windows 8.

I was using safari in full screen today and had to switch back-forth once (felt exactly same as switching between metro apps/desktop on Win8) and that got me thinking that the Classic or Legacy windows apps are not going anywhere. Microsoft will just make them run full screen in Windows 8+ (either a service pack or in 9 etc.) without additional features that WinRT apps enjoy.

It's amazing how much similar the full screen mode on OS X Lion feels like Windows 8.

Difference is you're not confronted with apps that have a radically different interface and window behavior. I'm also not being forced to use full-screen with a certain set of apps.

Personally I hardly ever use full-screen on OS X Lion simply because it serves no real purpose on a 27-inch screen. QuickTime X and VLC being the obvious exceptions of course. ;)

and don't forget the tutorial/interactive video thing that XP had

hated it from the bottom of my heart every time I had to install XP or create a new user on a box WHERE I HAD ALREADY DISMISSED THE DAMN TUTORIAL! :angry: :laugh: That stupid thing wouldn't go away unless I opened and closed it once!

(Somebody will no come by and point out an easier way to dismiss it after all these years!)

Difference is you're not confronted with apps that have a radically different interface and window behavior.

true. It does share at least one aspect though - hiding UI controls :p (like exiting out of full screen button in the menu bar).

I agree with this. Literally, all of the older generation and people who aren't really technophobes who I've shown Windows 8 too - as soon I've showed it too them and told them that's the new Windows, they've literally said "okay" and got on with it. They don't care and they've not questioned it, and they've all seemed fine. As long as their stuff works, boom. :p

Same here. Out of the eight :D people I have shown it to and let them use it, none, not one, has complained about any of the things that I see people here griping about all the time.

Not one of them said "what happened to the start thingy?"

or "why does it take x clicks to do y".

They sat down, looked at the screen, clicked on their desired tile, and got going.

Geeks see their control of the dark arts slipping away from them, and go into hissy fits over things the average user doesn't give two figs about.

true. It does share at least one aspect though - hiding UI controls :p (like exiting out of full screen button in the menu bar).

Yeah of course, they wouldn't make much sense when a window is full-screen. You do on the other hand still have access to the same universal Menu Bar, Dock and Mission Control. It's not like they're used for windowed apps only. My point is there isn't a split-up between full-screen apps and windowed ones and you're not forced to use something full-screen only. It's still all and the same Aqua interface. :)

I get it, but I'm not digging it. I've always been fond of the glass look. Switching to this is probably going to make me wonder what's wrong with my video driver for the first few days, since it looks like Aero Lite.

Got a chuckle out of that one, nice.

Seems that MS is just guessing at what to do, and it's kind a late in the dev cycle for that if you ask me. However, removing Aero makes sense in one area ... VDI. The GPU resources for Aero (RemoteFX) add up. Simply removing it and settling on a somewhat bland simple to render Gem OS-like color scheme removes this resource requirement. To be honest, it is needed in that environment as we won't be stacking Quadro GPUs at a minimum of $400 pop for 5-10 desktops each card. It's much easier to tell users the Aero themes are no longer in Windows as it is to tell them you can's have that nice transparency, etc. because we're not gonna buy the resources to do it. All users will do is demand a desktop which we don't want anymore. We're moving to VDI and Windows 7 seven ASAP. Windows 8 will be a support and end user nightmare and its going to be a helluva lot easier to deal with in a Virtual Desktop World.

If that's their justification it's a pretty pathetic one. With Windows 7 they have already designed it so that it disables Aero whenever resources are needed elsewhere, or when an application runs that isn't compatible with it. And it's not exactly as if Aero takes up much of a resource footprint, $30 bargain bin graphics cards are capable of running it these days with few issues so it just strikes me as being a very questionable design choice, especially given that with the introduction of Vista, Aero was one of the most popular features.

If that's their justification it's a pretty pathetic one. With Windows 7 they have already designed it so that it disables Aero whenever resources are needed elsewhere, or when an application runs that isn't compatible with it. And it's not exactly as if Aero takes up much of a resource footprint, $30 bargain bin graphics cards are capable of running it these days with few issues so it just strikes me as being a very questionable design choice, especially given that with the introduction of Vista, Aero was one of the most popular features.

Don't trust a randumb advice on the internet who makes such assumption based on a screenshot.

So far, MS didn't announce that they are giving up on GPU/2D acceleration to draw component on the Desktop. The funny part about that is that all Metro apps are GPU accelerated;hence the "fast & fluid" experience.

Because the glass effect is being replaced by a solid color doesn't makes it using less resources than before.

I invite you to test it by yourself or to wait for reviews that compare GPU usage on Windows 7 and Windows 8. For now you can download any software that shows GPU usage (ex: process explorer) and see how low Aero uses your GPU. My current GPU usage is around 1% as I'm writing this post. Will Windows 8 uses 0%? I highly doubt it. Also it won't be using my CPU because that would makes it really heavy on the CPU usage, and it will kill any laptop battery.

If that's their justification it's a pretty pathetic one. With Windows 7 they have already designed it so that it disables Aero whenever resources are needed elsewhere, or when an application runs that isn't compatible with it. And it's not exactly as if Aero takes up much of a resource footprint, $30 bargain bin graphics cards are capable of running it these days with few issues so it just strikes me as being a very questionable design choice, especially given that with the introduction of Vista, Aero was one of the most popular features.

I'm not going to get into RemoteFX and VDI, but removing aero was not required to alleviate the overhead, simply making classic the default theme would suffice. When you take away desktops, users want the same experience or they will complain and demand that they should be allowed to spend their budgets how they see fit and not accept a lesser remote session.

I think MS' justification is trying to wean everyone away from Windows 7. Remember, Windows 7 is the best desktop OS out there and there's really no good reason to change other than MS' furthering their Phone and Tablet efforts and leveraging their desktop dominance to do so. That's my personal feeling on the matter. Windows 7 isn't going down easy so the more different they can make 8, the more they can give the appearance they are offering so much more. MS Shareholders do not need nor want Windows 7 living as long as XP, and given it's superioirity, it can last twice as long.

There's also a bit of MS has never had much style. Look at Windows icons and the customization market. Look at gadgets, then look at Widgets, Konfabulator, and X-widgets. Aero is the most stylish thing MS ever did, lol.

Looking at the metro frameworks we have, it'd be voodoo for them to get a decent performing version of Office running in Metro, and I really can't seem them ever porting over the full applications - not with the current frameworks anyway. Maybe smaller, bite sized, metro-optimised versions, but not the full prowess of the suite. And to be fair, the full programs aren't suited for Metro anyway with the amount of options they have at their disposal.

Going with what we have now then yes, but I doubt the APIs will stay at the level they are now. I fully believe WinRT is the next step and Win32 will slowly work it's way off of the OS over time. I don't see why the apps wouldn't work in metro, we're just talking full screen versions of them. They all have the ribbon and that covers what you need really. I'm sure it's doable, UI wise there really isn't anything to hold them back, it's just like you said the frameworks aren't there yet. This is also why right now they haven't allowed metro apps to even run on the desktop but I expect that to change at some point.

The blog only states that rendering realistic glass with all the required effects necessary to sustain that illusion looks, "Dated and Cheesy". This I could agree with. I don't, but I could. The glass effects in Vista and Win7 are not very realistic anyway.

I think a translucent window frame achieves the design goal of reducing the visual weight of the chrome better than solid white borders. A clear frame simply is not there. A white frame is there no matter how pristine the white is.

Sorry for the double post:

Going with what we have now then yes, but I doubt the APIs will stay at the level they are now. I fully believe WinRT is the next step and Win32 will slowly work it's way off of the OS over time. I don't see why the apps wouldn't work in metro, we're just talking full screen versions of them. They all have the ribbon and that covers what you need really. I'm sure it's doable, UI wise there really isn't anything to hold them back, it's just like you said the frameworks aren't there yet. This is also why right now they haven't allowed metro apps to even run on the desktop but I expect that to change at some point.

What about comparing multiple documents side by side? Snapping allows two different applications to be used simultaneously. However, a user writing a report can easily have several documents open at once, along with a few web pages for reference. Expecting the user to swipe to the right to switch between all of these windows is extremely cumbersome and a bit slow.

Yes, currently the traditional desktop is there to support the existing Office and this usage case but that only supports accusations that Metro is unsuited for getting any "real" work done.

Sorry for the double post:

What about comparing multiple documents side by side? Snapping allows two different applications to be used simultaneously. However, a user writing a report can easily have several documents open at once, along with a few web pages for reference. Expecting the user to swipe to the right to switch between all of these windows is extremely cumbersome and a bit slow.

Yes, currently the traditional desktop is there to support the existing Office and this usage case but that only supports accusations that Metro is unsuited for getting any "real" work done.

If you read carefully the long blog post, you'll see that Metro isn't made to replace the Desktop. Both are going to live side by side for a very long time.

Don't trust a randumb advice on the internet who makes such assumption based on a screenshot.

So far, MS didn't announce that they are giving up on GPU/2D acceleration to draw component on the Desktop. The funny part about that is that all Metro apps are GPU accelerated;hence the "fast & fluid" experience.

Because the glass effect is being replaced by a solid color doesn't makes it using less resources than before.

I invite you to test it by yourself or to wait for reviews that compare GPU usage on Windows 7 and Windows 8. For now you can download any software that shows GPU usage (ex: process explorer) and see how low Aero uses your GPU. My current GPU usage is around 1% as I'm writing this post. Will Windows 8 uses 0%? I highly doubt it. Also it won't be using my CPU because that would makes it really heavy on the CPU usage, and it will kill any laptop battery.

Yes, that was precisely my point. The footprint is so low there's simply no justification I can see for removing it. Having the UI GPU accelerated is great but I personally think this new design just looks horrible. I liked Aero because it was a break from the traditional dull gradients that were traditional for so many years. I just feel as if Microsoft have taken a big step backwards here.

If you read carefully the long blog post, you'll see that Metro isn't made to replace the Desktop. Both are going to live side by side for a very long time.

That doesn't address my point. Office does not work well in Metro, how can this be fixed?

Yes, it does. Since Office isn't a Metro app, there isn't anything that needs fixed at the moment.

I really hope you realize you're completely talking out of your ass. Apple had to support legacy apps all the same back in May 2001 when they first released OS X. Why exactly do you think they incorporated "Classic" into the OS and continued to support it until OS X Leopard (2007)? The main difference is that Apple released their important new apps for OS X from the get-go instead of letting then run only within the old Classic environment. Microsoft on the other hand is actively sustaining the desktop for the years to come by not releasing something like Office 15 for Metro, which in my opinion is a huge mistake. If a suite like Office is truly better off running within the desktop environment - as some have brought up in defense - you know there's something fundamentally wrong with Metro.

My original point however is you can't really speak of a "uniform" situation when you're dealing with two completely different interfaces that each run their own separate set of apps within the same OS, which isn't just there for legacy purposes.

The point is that unlike classic, the desktop in Windows 8 is just an app and not an entire OS like classic was, that, as you said, was dropped in Leopard. That shows that Apple don't need to maintain backwards compatibility for the userbase it has.

Microsoft however, need to maintain backwards compatibility for the sake of applications that have no Metro version e.g. Office 2010 or lower or even custom applications that are used by businesses, there's no Metro version available and I don't think businesses will spend the money rewriting any custom applications they use, this means that the "two interfaces" have to co-exist. Office could run quite happily in a Metro environment but it would have to use WinRT APIs, which older versions of Office don't use.

Yes, that was precisely my point. The footprint is so low there's simply no justification I can see for removing it.

Actually delivering the full Aero experience to 100s, 1000s of remote clients is not low. I'm not saying that's why they did it, I'm saying that's one positive. Though I am sure this would be on anyone's top 5 reasons to drop Aero.

I love Aero and think what's in the screenshot is fugly. Would prefer it stayed. But no Aero will save a ton of money and resources and gig to the desktop may not be as necessary as it is now for large VDI environments.

VDI and App-V's time has come.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • @Sayan...I have defended you at various points as I hope you know. This headline however is utter trash...shame on you sir!
    • An actual cosmic "Eye of Sauron" had been looking straight at us all along by Sayan Sen Image by Kovin P. Vasquez via Pexels | Not representative An international team of researchers has solved a long-standing mystery surrounding a distant blazar known as PKS 1424+240, helping explain why it produces some of the brightest high-energy gamma rays and cosmic neutrinos ever observed despite appearing to have a relatively slow-moving jet. The findings were published on June 6 in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters. The study addresses a broader challenge in astrophysics: understanding how extreme cosmic objects accelerate particles to very high energies and produce very high-energy (VHE) photons and neutrinos. PKS 1424+240 is located billions of light-years from Earth. It has attracted attention for years because it is both a powerful source of VHE gamma rays and the brightest known neutrino-emitting blazar in the sky, according to observations by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. It is also associated with one of the strongest peaks in IceCube's nine-year neutrino sky map A blazar is a type of active galactic nucleus powered by a supermassive black hole that pulls in surrounding matter and launches jets of plasma moving close to the speed of light. What makes blazars unique is their orientation. One of their jets points almost directly toward Earth, making them appear exceptionally bright across the electromagnetic spectrum and allowing scientists to study some of the most extreme physical processes in the Universe. The scientists exclaimed it's like the 'Eye of Sauron' in deep space. Usually, the brightest gamma-ray-emitting blazars are expected to have jets that appear to move very quickly. However, radio observations of PKS 1424+240 suggested that its jet was moving much more slowly, creating a contradiction that became part of a long-running problem known as the "Doppler factor crisis." To investigate, researchers analyzed 15 years of observations from the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), a network of 10 radio antennas spread across the continental United States, Hawaii and St. Croix. Using a technique called Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), astronomers combine signals from widely separated radio telescopes to create a virtual Earth-sized telescope capable of revealing extremely fine details. The team combined 42 polarization-sensitive radio images collected between 2009 and 2025, creating a much deeper and more detailed view of the jet than had previously been possible. The observations were carried out as part of MOJAVE (Monitoring Of Jets in Active galactic nuclei with VLBA Experiments), a long-running program that studies the brightness, polarization and magnetic field structures of jets produced by active galaxies. The project aims to better understand how activity near supermassive black holes is linked to high-energy radiation and neutrino emission. “When we reconstructed the image, it looked absolutely stunning,” said Yuri Kovalev, lead author of the study and Principal Investigator of the European Research Council-funded MuSES project at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy. “We have never seen anything quite like it — a near-perfect toroidal magnetic field with a jet, pointing straight at us.” The image revealed an unusual geometry. The researchers found that Earth lies almost directly in line with the jet, with a viewing angle of less than 0.6 degrees. In simple terms, astronomers are looking almost straight down the jet. This turned out to be the key to the mystery. Because the jet is aimed almost directly at Earth, a relativistic effect called Doppler boosting dramatically increases its apparent brightness. The study found that this effect boosts the emission by a factor of about 30 while also making the jet appear slower than it actually is. “This alignment causes a boost in brightness by a factor of 30 or more,” said Jack Livingston, a co-author at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy. “At the same time, the jet appears to move slowly due to projection effects — a classic optical illusion.” The nearly head-on view also gave scientists a rare look at the jet's magnetic field. Using polarized radio signals, they detected a clear toroidal, or doughnut-shaped, magnetic field component. The observations suggest the jet carries an electric current and that its magnetic field helps launch, shape and stabilize the flow of plasma. Researchers believe this magnetic structure may also play a key role in accelerating particles to energies high enough to produce both gamma rays and neutrinos. “Solving this puzzle confirms that active galactic nuclei with supermassive black holes are not only powerful accelerators of electrons, but also of protons — the origin of the observed high-energy neutrinos,” Kovalev said. The research was conducted under the MuSES (Multi-messenger Studies of Energetic Sources) project, which investigates how active galactic nuclei accelerate particles and generate different cosmic signals, including light and neutrinos. Scientists say understanding how protons are accelerated and linked to neutrino production remains one of the major unanswered questions in astrophysics. The findings help explain why some blazars can appear to have slow jets while still producing extremely bright high-energy emissions. More broadly, the study strengthens the link between relativistic jets, magnetic fields, gamma rays and high-energy neutrinos. Researchers say the results provide new clues about how some of the Universe's most powerful natural particle accelerators work and offer important insights for multimessenger astronomy, which combines different types of cosmic signals to study extreme events in space. Source: European Research Council, EDP Sciences This article was generated with some help from AI and reviewed by an editor. Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, this material is used for the purpose of news reporting. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
    • Gotenks98 is right... Outlook (new) is absolute trash. Doesn't Mozilla have an Enterprise Version of Firebird?
    • Microsoft Weekly: Surface Laptop Ultra, Windows 11 context menus, Build 2026 recap, and more by Taras Buria This week's news recap is here, with Microsoft announcing the new Surface Laptop Ultra, fresh chips from NVIDIA for Windows on ARM, a no-build week, fixes for Windows 11's context menus, gaming news, reviews, and more. Quick links: Windows 10 and 11 Windows Insider Program Updates are available Reviews are in Gaming news Great deals to check Windows 11 and Windows 10 Here, we talk about everything happening around Microsoft's latest operating system in the Stable channel and preview builds: new features, removed features, controversies, bugs, interesting findings, and more. And, of course, you may find a word or two about older versions. At Computex 2026, together with NVIDIA, Microsoft announced the Surface Laptop Ultra, its most powerful laptop to date, powered by NVIDIA's RTX Spark processor. Details about this computer are currently scarce, as Microsoft has only revealed certain parts of its specs. So far, we know that the computer has a 15-inch mini-LED display, a rich set of ports, a powerful processor, and all-day battery life. It also comes with a new wallpaper, which you can already download here in full resolution. The Surface Laptop Studio is not the only NVIDIA-powered Surface, which Microsoft unveiled this week. At Build 2026, the company also debuted the Surface RTX Spark Dev Box, an odd-shaped desktop with a 20-core NVIDIA Grace CPU and an NVIDIA Blackwell RTX GPU with 6,144 CUDA cores and fifth-generation Tensor Cores with FP4 precision, connected via the NVIDIA NVLink-C2C chip-to-chip interconnect for high performance. According to Microsoft, it can run models with up to 120 billion parameters locally without relying on cloud GPU infrastructure. These two new Surface devices are likely to cost quite a lot, and for those who need a more affordable device, Microsoft is preparing the next-gen Qualcomm-powered Surface Pro and Surface Laptop. This week, details about these two devices leaked in plenty of detail. Other announcements at Build 2026 include the following: Microsoft unveils new security tools for IT admins and developers building AI products Microsoft announces Scout, an OpenClaw-powered personal agent for enterprise customers Microsoft unveils MAI-Thinking-1 reasoning and MAI-Code-1 coding models Microsoft announced a new Windows 11 native command-line utility Microsoft unveils Majorana 2 quantum chip, accelerating commercial timeline to 2029 Microsoft believes that AI agents will eventually replace apps through Project Solara Microsoft introduces Web IQ, a Bing-powered search system built for AI agents Last week, Microsoft released a new Experimental build, which introduced a major Start menu upgrade. It now lets you toggle off specific parts of the menu without affecting other features, resize the menu, and hide additional UI elements. We published a closer look here, so if you want to know what Microsoft is cooking without enrolling in the Insider program and installing unstable builds, check it out. Speaking of new features, many users are very annoyed about the way Microsoft delivers them. Recently, a frustrated user shared their experience with gradual rollouts, and even Microsoft engineers admitted there is a flaw in the system that prevents new features from applying properly. One of those new features includes the ability to uninstall AI models in Windows 11 with a single click. Windows 11 is finally getting fixes for its slow context menus. Marcus Ash from Microsoft confirmed that the company is working on fixing Windows 11's context menus. Reworked context menus are going to be faster, simpler by default, and "configurable to what you use most." According to Marcus, Microsoft will share more details soon. Windows Insider Program Windows 11 preview builds, released last week, are now available for download as standalone ISO files. These days, Microsoft regularly pushes new images, allowing users to clean-install its recent Windows 11 preview builds faster and easier. If you want to try the latest Windows 11 features without jumping through the Windows Update hoops, get those new images here. Sadly, Microsoft did not release new Windows 11 preview builds this week. Come back next time. Updates are available This section covers software, firmware, and other notable updates (released and coming soon) delivering new features, security fixes, improvements, patches, and more from Microsoft and third parties. Microsoft is preparing new features for Teams. Later this month, the messenger will receive a new download manager with auto-dismissing notifications, reducing clutter and making the overall experience less annoying when dealing with downloads. Mozilla released Firefox 151.0.3, a new bug-fixing update for the browser. It is a small release, which fixes problems with pasting into text fields and the oversized VPN button on the toolbar. The update is now available for all users in the Release channel. Here are other updates and releases you may find interesting: VS Code 1.123 introduces massive upgrades for persistent AI developer workflows Microsoft OneDrive is getting a simple yet much-needed feature Microsoft faces heat after quietly blocking promised Office features on Apple systems Microsoft resumes forced Copilot app installation on some Windows PCs Browser vendors pen an open letter to Microsoft, saying "enough is enough" Here are the latest drivers and firmware updates released this week: AMD Radeon Software 26.6.1 with optimizations for F1 25: 2026 Season, World of Tanks: HEAT, and various bug fixes. Reviews are in Here is the hardware and software we reviewed this week Steven Parker dropped more mini PC reviews this week. GEEKOM Air12 2026 Edition is a low-power, affordable computer with an Intel Tiger Lake Pentium Gold processor, up to 16GB of memory, and 512GB of storage, costing just $349. It is light, quiet, energy efficient, and has modern ports on the front. However, the front-facing USB Type-C is data-only, and there are some quirks with the computer's memory, so check out the full review. The AMD RX 9070 GRE has been released worldwide, and we published a benchmark review comparing this powerful graphics card to the RX 9070 XT, 7800 XT, the NVIDIA RTX 5070, and RTX 4070. It has solid, balanced performance, plenty of RAM, and low temperatures, but watch out for mediocre ray tracing performance and not the best efficiency. Also, we reviewed the Cuktech 10 Ultra, a compact, high-power charger with four ports and a big display full of various stats. This tiny charger can pull nearly 120W and spread that power according to each connected device's needs. It also comes with a high-quality 240W cable, three power modes, and retractable prongs. The best part? It is quite affordable, just make sure you have an outlet placed in the right spot to benefit from the built-in display. On the gaming side Learn about upcoming game releases, Xbox rumors, new hardware, software updates, freebies, deals, discounts, and more. Do you remember the ASUS ROG Xbox Ally, Microsoft's first handheld console designed in partnership with ASUS? This week, ASUS revealed a new version of the device to celebrate twenty years of its Republic of Gamers brand. The new ROG Xbox Ally X20 features an OLED display, a transforming D-Pad, TMR sticks, and other changes. However, the chip inside the console is still the same. Forza Horizon 6 launched last month to critical acclaim, but the game will soon have a new rival made by those who used to work on Forza Horizon titles. Mike Brown from Maverick Games announced Clutch, an upcoming racing game with a story-driven campaign, deep car customization, and rich multiplayer. The game is coming to PC, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5 in Spring 2027. The next update for Minecraft now has a release date. This week, Mojang announced that Chaos Cubed will be available on June 16, 2026. In addition, Mojang published a teaser of the next Minecraft movie. A Minecraft Movie Squared has now been confirmed for a release somewhere in 2027. NVIDIA GeForce Now is getting 18 new games in June. Those include Jurassic World Evolution 3, Fatekeeper, GOALS, Gothic 1 Remake, NTE: Neverness to Everness, and more. If you are a Game Pass subscriber, you can also get new games soon: Persona 5 Royal, Starseeker: Astroneer Expeditions, and more are coming to the service this month. Sumer Game Fest 2026 happened this week, where we saw plenty of new games, including Alien Isolation 2, Final Fantasy VII Remake Part 3, Gen Atlas from the Shadow of the Colossus creator, a new Cuphead game in 8-bit style, a new expansion for Mafia: The Old Country, and more. Finally, here are this week's Weekend PC Game Deals, full of discounts and the latest freebies from the Epic Games Store. Other gaming news includes the following: God of War Laufey announced, introducing Kratos' wife as the new protagonist Ori studio's No Rest for the Wicked 1.0 release and console plans announced Microsoft launches Godot Sample to streamline Xbox PC game development on the engine Great deals to check Every week, we cover many deals on different hardware and software. The following discounts are still available, so check them out. You might find something you want or need. Samsung 990 PRO SSD 2TB NVMe - $389.99 | 39% off Sonos Sub 4 - Wireless Subwoofer - $759 | 16% off Logitech MX Creative Console - $159.99 | 20% off This link will take you to other issues of the Microsoft Weekly series. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing for extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      X-No-file earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • One Month Later
      pestcontrol46 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      pestcontrol46 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      JKR earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      moog19 went up a rank
      Rookie
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      510
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      274
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      75
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      71
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!