Leo, Richard, and Paul discuss 26H1, Windows 11, Microsoft and other earnings, AI, antitrust, .NET 10, Xbox, and much more.
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We’ve heard that Microsoft will go off script this year with a 26H1 release of Windows 11 specifically aimed at Snapdragon X2-based PCs, as it did with the early release of 24H2 last year for the first generation Snapdragon X
Microsoft (over) simplifies its Windows Update naming scheme, and then has to backtrack a bit because of admin/IT backlash
October Preview Update screwed up Task Manager a little bit
Windows Insider
Microsoft Edge password manager can now save and sync passkeys, but you should still use a third-party password/identity manager
Microsoft Store gets a bulk installer but only on the web
Microsoft earnings: Revenues up 18 percent to $77.7 billion but cost of AI is spiraling out of control and will only get bigger this FY
AMD: 36 percent revenue growth isn’t enough for Wall Street
Alphabet/Google: Up 16 percent to $102.3 billion, ads are 72.5 percent of revenues
Amazon: Up 13 percent to $180 billion in revenues, $30 from AWS
Apple: Up 8 percent to $102.5 billion, this quarter will be its best ever
Epic Games and Google announce settlement in Epic v. Google, a dramatic common-sense move that Apple should (but won’t) emulate
Regulatory filings tied to Microsoft earnings suggest OpenAI lost $12 billion in most recent quarter
Freed from Microsoft, OpenAI immediately signs $38 billion infrastructure deal with AWS
.NET 10 to launch next week at .NET Conf 2025
Xbox Game Pass getting Call of Duty Black Ops 7, five more Day One games in coming days (with an *)
Xbox October Update rolls out with game shader preloading on Xbox Ally, new modules in Game Hubs on console, more games to stream on Xbox Cloud Gaming, more.
Nintendo Switch 2 is off to a blockbuster first year with pricier console killing it financially
PS Plus Premium subscribers can now stream select PS5 games from the cloud (as opposed to a console)
The new all-in-one Affinity app is 100 percent free on Windows, Mac, and, soon, iPad – You can use a Canva paid subscription to access AI features.
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