Windows 11’s recent update cycle has once again exposed how fragile the hardware–software handshake can be: multiple user reports and vendor advisories show that changes in Windows 11’s Host Memory Buffer (HMB) negotiation and related storage behavior in version 24H2 triggered system instability...
DirectStorage is less marketing buzzword and more a realignment of how modern PCs move game data from fast storage into the GPU — but its impact depends on the whole stack lining up correctly.
Background / Overview
DirectStorage began as an Xbox Velocity architecture feature and later migrated...
A high‑profile benchmarking video from Gamers Nexus — conducted on a Fedora‑based gaming image called Bazzite and covering modern GPUs from both Nvidia and AMD — argues that Linux gaming is no longer niche and, in many real‑world cases, is good enough to be a practical alternative to Windows for...
Installing Windows 11 on a custom partition and squeezing the best possible performance from your drive starts with planning, not luck — the difference between a clean, fast system and a frustrating reinstall later often comes down to partition layout, firmware settings, and a handful of...
Lecture notes, an online lecture, a tightened deadline and a late-night build: the laptops HT Tech lists as the “best under ₹60K” promise a dependable, light, and long‑running companion for students, coders and hybrid workers — and most of the headline claims check out on closer inspection, with...
When an upgrade to Windows 11 25H2 stalls with a dialog saying an NVMe SSD is “not compatible” and the update is postponed, it’s not random noise — this is a deliberate compatibility safeguard tied to a recurring Host Memory Buffer (HMB) interaction that first surfaced during the 24H2 rollout...
The debate about whether Windows 10 or Windows 11 delivers the better gaming experience is no longer a purely technical argument — it has become a cultural one, tied up with benchmarking obsession, perceived differences versus measurable gains, and a growing tension between security features...
Microsoft’s pitch for Windows 11 promised more than a new skin — it promised a gaming OS that would feel like it was built from the ground up for modern play: Auto HDR to breathe new life into older titles, DirectStorage to make load screens and texture pop-in fade into memory, and tighter Xbox...
auto hdr
cloud gaming
cross-platform
developer adoption
directstorage
directx 12
driver maturity
game bar
game pass
gaming
gpu decompression
hardware requirements
hdr monitor
loading time
nvmessd
open world
shader model 6.0
windows 11
xbox integration
Windows 11 ships with a cluster of gamer-focused features — Game Mode, Auto HDR, DirectStorage, hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling and per-app GPU preferences — that can materially change responsiveness, load times and visual fidelity when configured correctly, but many players never look past...
Borderlands 4’s PC system requirements have arrived, and they mark a clear shift: Gearbox and 2K are treating the PC edition as a modern‑hardware first release, demanding eight CPU cores, a large SSD footprint, and mid‑to‑high‑end graphics hardware even at the stated minimum tier.
Background...
Phison’s latest public testing and community forensics have reframed the mid‑August Windows 11 SSD scare: what began as frantic reports that the Windows 11 August cumulative updates (commonly tracked as KB5063878 and the related KB5062660) were “bricking” NVMe drives now appears to be a...
Microsoft and Phison have jointly reframed a mid‑August wave of alarming NVMe disappearances and alleged “bricking” incidents: the most credible working explanation now centers on pre‑release engineering firmware present on a small subset of drives, not an inherent, platform‑wide flaw introduced...
Microsoft and Phison have now all but closed the book on the late‑August panic: after weeks of community reports, lab reproductions and headlines warning that Windows 11 24H2’s August cumulative (KB5063878) was “bricking” SSDs, thorough vendor and Microsoft testing found no reproducible link...
Microsoft and Phison are publicly at odds over whether last month’s Windows 11 cumulative update (commonly tracked as KB5063878) caused data-loss and device‑disappearance issues on some NVMe SSDs — and the debate reveals a messy intersection of community test benches, vendor lab validation...
backup
community testing
data loss
firmware
firmware hashes
firmware provenance
heavy-writes
kb5063878
nvmessd
patch
phison
reproduction
ssd firmware
telemetry
thermal throttling
windows 11
windows update
Microsoft says the recent reports that a Windows 11 cumulative update “bricked” consumer SSDs are not supported by its telemetry and lab findings, and vendor testing so far has failed to reproduce a fleet‑level failure tied to the August servicing wave tracked as KB5063878.
Background
The story...
Borderlands 4’s official PC system requirements have arrived — and they push the franchise into a distinctly modern‑PC envelope: an eight‑core CPU minimum, 16 GB RAM baseline, an RTX 2070 / RX 5700 XT‑class GPU at minimum, and a headline 100 GB SSD install, with recommended specs climbing to 32...
Borderlands 4 arrives on PC alongside consoles on September 12, 2025, and Gearbox’s published PC system requirements make one thing clear: this is a modern‑PC title that expects eight physical CPU cores, fast NVMe storage, and a GPU with 8–12+ GB of VRAM just to be comfortably playable at...
Borderlands 4’s PC system requirements have landed and they mark a clear shift toward a modern‑PC baseline: expect an 8‑core minimum CPU, 16 GB of RAM as the lowest supported memory, and a 100 GB SSD install, with recommended builds pushing to 32 GB RAM and RTX 3080 / RX 6800 XT‑class GPUs for a...
Borderlands 4’s PC system requirements are out, and they raise the bar for midrange rigs: Gearbox and 2K list an RTX 2070 or RX 5700 XT as the minimum GPU, an Intel Core i7-9700 or Ryzen 7 2700X CPU, 16 GB of RAM as the baseline, and a 100 GB SSD install, while the recommended spec jumps to an...
Microsoft’s August cumulative (KB5063878) has been tied to a narrow but serious class of SSD failures and strange slowdowns — and while community researchers now point to pre‑release engineering firmware on some drives as a plausible trigger, the broader evidence remains mixed and important...