
Jd
747 posts



Microsoft has brought back the ability to move the taskbar and make it smaller in Windows 11, five years after taking it away at launch. The new options are now available to Windows Insiders in the Experimental channel with Build 26300.8493 and can be found in Settings > Personalization > Taskbar > Taskbar behaviors. You can place the taskbar on the top, left, or right side of the screen. The Start menu, search, and system tray adjust automatically, while the smaller size gives more screen space. Early tests show everything works smoothly and feels natural. Via:Windowslatest


After four years full of challenges and hard work, it's time to move on. I leave with the feeling that the mission is complete. 4 seasons, 3 championships. I will never forget the love I received from the fans from my very first days. Catalonia is my place on earth. Thank you to everyone I met along the way during these beautiful four years. A special thank you to President Laporta for giving me the chance to live the most incredible chapter of my career. Barça is back where it belongs. Visca el Barça. Visca Catalunya 💙❤️ @fcbarcelona



might aswell do a kendrick ranking too! (included some singles i like as well)

AI generated mukbang videos have been starting to go viral


BOYNEXTDOOR has released the music video for 'Knock Knock Knock.'



Microsoft's hidden Windows 11 trick makes apps launch 70% faster. I tested it on a low-end PC, and early results are promising. Right now, when you click Start, open File Explorer, launch Edge, or right-click for a context menu, and there’s often that tiny micro-stutter before anything happens. Microsoft is now testing a feature called Low Latency Profile. Once turned on, and you do a high-priority action, Windows 11 briefly pushes the CPU to max frequency for 1–3 seconds, finishes the task faster, then drops back down. In my testing on a constrained VM with just 2 cores and 4GB RAM, the difference was obvious. Edge, Outlook, Copilot, and the Start menu opened much faster. CPU usage spiked to around 96–97%, but only for a few seconds. For high-end PCs, the difference may be small. But for budget laptops and low-end Windows 11 machines, this could be a real game-changer.














