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By LoneWolfSL · Posted
Two Xbox Ally Windows gaming handhelds announced, coming out in 2025 by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Following years of rumors, Microsoft today announced two handhelds for the gaming crowd under the Xbox brand. Coming in as a collaboration with ASUS, the new ROG Xbox Ally and ROG Xbox Ally X are said to be aiming to "combine the power of Xbox with the freedom you expect from Windows." The new hardware is built on the AMD Ryzen Z2 A (ROG Xbox Ally) and AMD Ryzen AI Z2 Extreme (ROG Xbox Ally X) processors. Here's the complete specs sheet for both devices: Specification ROG Xbox Ally ROG Xbox Ally X Operating System Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home Comfort & Input Contoured grips inspired by Xbox Wireless Controllers deliver all-day comfort. ABXY buttons / D-pad / L & R Hall effect analog triggers / L & R bumpers / Xbox button / View button / Menu button / Command Center button / Library button / 2x assignable back buttons / 2x full-size analog sticks / HD haptics / 6-Axis IMU Contoured grips inspired by Xbox Wireless Controllers deliver all-day comfort, complete with impulse triggers for enhanced control. ABXY buttons / D-pad / L & R impulse triggers / L & R bumpers / Xbox button / View button / Menu button / Command Center button / Library button / 2x assignable back buttons / 2x full-size analog sticks / HD haptics / 6-Axis IMU Processor AMD Ryzen™ Z1 A Processor AMD Ryzen™ AI Z1 Extreme Processor Memory 16GB LPDDR5X-6400 24GB LPDDR5X-8000 Storage 512GB M.2 2280 SSD for easier upgrade 1TB M.2 2280 SSD for easier upgrade Display 7" FHD (1080p) IPS, 500 nits, 16:9, 120Hz refresh rate, FreeSync Premium, Corning Gorilla Glass Victus + DXC Anti-Reflection 7" FHD (1080p) IPS, 500 nits, 16:9, 120Hz refresh rate, FreeSync Premium, Corning Gorilla Glass Victus + DXC Anti-Reflection I/O Ports 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C with DisplayPort™ 2.1 / Power Delivery 3.0 1x UHS-II microSD card reader (supports SD, SDXC, SDHC) 1x 3.5mm Combo Audio Jack 1x USB4 Type-C with DisplayPort™ 2.1 / Power Delivery 3.0, Thunderbolt™ 4 compatible 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C with DisplayPort™ 2.1 / Power Delivery 3.0 1x UHS-II microSD card reader (supports SD, SDXC, SDHC; UHS-I with DDR200 mode) 1x 3.5mm Combo Audio Jack Network and Communication Wi-Fi 6E (2 × 2) + Bluetooth 5.4 Wi-Fi 6E (2 × 2) + Bluetooth 5.4 Dimensions 290.8 × 121.5 × 50.7mm 290.8 × 121.5 × 50.7mm Weight 670g 715g Battery 60Wh 80Wh Included ROG Xbox Ally 65W charger Stand ROG Xbox Ally X 65W charger Stand According to Microsoft, the Xbox Ally handhelds will be running optimized Windows 11 versions that offer quick and easy access to tools like Xbox Game Bar and ASUS’s Armoury Crate. The company also highlighted that being Windows means that any other storefront on the platform, like Steam, GOG, and Epic Games Store, and Game Pass, will be available seamlessly. The Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X are launching during the 2025 holiday season. Pricing details, accessories, and pre-order information will be coming later. -
By monterxz · Posted
As I've said: right now Edge is better at blocking ads than Chrome, and I'll look for another browser when it changes. -
By M. Murcek · Posted
It gave OEMs all kinds of stuff to put effort into that did nothing about bad drivers that crashed the system. -
By olympus1 · Posted
Yes, because Google's ad platform dominates the internet and most sites use Google's ad platform. Microsoft cares about their own ad platform. And they whitelist their ads. Edge is still on mv2 on desktop but they have officially announced they will stop supporting it. They haven't announced the date, but it is on their roadmap. Microsoft HAS the resources to keep it, but they have announced they will remove it unlike other chromium based browsers like Brave and Opera which have announced they will try to keep it. They postponing it in an attempt maybe to gain some market share from Chrome, but their end goal is the same, the deprecation of mv2. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-edge/extensions-chromium/developer-guide/manifest-v3#manifest-timeline-for-microsoft-edge-and-partner-center -
By +mram · Posted
I'll say this again: This hasn't changed since Windows 10. This customization issue is not unique to Windows 11. Windows 10 was released about 10 years ago. I didn't look at changing default fonts in Windows 8 or 7. Most (sane) people would look for supportability -- you might have the desired customization in those OSs but not able to play games, apps, that one typically gets the OS for. No one is going to trade off getting an ancient OS just so they can have larger fonts but not be able to play games or run apps. There are many options that are not exposed in the default UI because they have a lot more potential harm than benefit. Doesn't mean they don't exist. Hence, registry changes. "What's the harm by leaving it in Settings?" Imagine if you changed the default font to something unreadable. How would you change it back if you can't read anything? The settings UI allows one to change size and style, but not font, so you'd still be able to read it. Changing the font itself to Wingdings might render an OS unusable. Now YOU might be savvy enough to make that change and/or undo it, but that's why it's not exposed in simplistic UI and instead is moved to registry changes. Your 3rd party app is most likely causing conflict with the registry as it wants to make its own changes. It's not voodoo magic here, that's typically what these apps do. I'd bet you a beer if I spin up a new VM for Windows 11 and try my links above with no Winaero Tweaker it'd work just fine. Introduction of 3rd party apps is always suspect -- who knows what else it's doing.
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