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Windows

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When Microsoft was developing Windows 95, developers discovered that SimCity had a severe memory bug that caused it to crash on the new operating system—but instead of forcing the game studio to fix it, Microsoft engineers actually rewrote the core Windows 95 source code to detect if SimCity was running and safely allocate memory for it.

Featured Image depicting the latest Windows10 and 11 Update Problems

Latest Windows Update Problems and How to Fix Them

OneCommander opened on desktop.

OneCommander Is a Great File Explorer Alternative for Power Users

Windows 11 God Mode

Windows 11 Has a Settings Problem — God Mode Is Still the Best Fix in 2026

Windows 11 laptop on a table with a hand on keyboard. Display showing Chrome with Gemini block icon

Stop Chrome from Auto-Downloading Gemini Nano in Windows

Linux

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Shellgpt Turn Words To Commands

ShellGPT: Turn Your Words into Terminal Commands

A Complete Guide to Dotfile Management with GNU Stow

The Easiest Way to Manage Dotfiles Using GNU Stow

Newelle Ai Assistant Linux

This AI Assistant Makes the Linux Desktop Much Smarter

Manage Users Linux

How to Manage Users from the Command Line in Linux

Why I No Longer Install Linux Optimization Tools Feature Image

The Myth of Linux Optimization Tools, and Why You Really Don’t Need Them At All

macOS

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Vintage keyboard with tactile buttons paired with a modern digital interface on screen.

Apple’s original 1984 Macintosh keyboard had no arrow keys, no function keys, and no numeric pad because Steve Jobs wanted users to reach for the mouse first. Then Apple quietly sold the missing keys as an accessory.

Screencap Mac App

Stop Forgetting Your Workday: This Mac App Tracks Everything Automatically

Image featuring a realistic MacBook with an infected virus sign on the screen.

Protect Yourself From the macOS Flaw that Bypasses Apple Privacy Controls

View Folder Size Mac Os Featured

Need to View Folder Size in macOS Finder? Use These Tricks

Maccy Eiekaxmysii Unsplash

You Can Finally Check Your Mac’s Clipboard History

ChromeOS

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Three people using a Chromebook.

You Can Now Share Your Chromebook Screen With Others

Chromebook

How to Control the Mouse Cursor Using Keyboard in Chromebook

Three people using a Chromebook.

8 of the Best Games to Play on Your Chromebook at School

New Google Chromebooks Featured

New Chromebooks Aren’t That “New”

Chromebook Buying Guide Featured

Chromebook Buying Guide 2024: What to Look for in Your Next Machine

A Guide to the KDE Notification System

By Tavis J. Hampton – Nov 11, 2011

4 Tips to Make Windows 7 Boot Faster

By Miguel Leiva-Gomez – Nov 11, 2011

How to Free Up Drive Space By Removing Shadow Copies [Windows]

By JJ – Oct 22, 2011

How to Optimize KDE Desktop Effects

By Tavis J. Hampton – Oct 19, 2011

Can I Install Amd64 Ubuntu On My Intel 64-bit Machine? [MTE Explains]

By Damien Oh – Oct 17, 2011

How to Reverse The Mouse Scrolling Direction in Ubuntu (aka Natural Scrolling)

By Damien Oh – Sep 16, 2011

How to Increase the Memory Limit for 32-bit Applications in Windows 64-bit OS

Did you know that 32-bit applications are limited to using only 2GB of RAM? Here we show you how to increase the memory limit for 32-bit applications

By JJ – Aug 13, 2011

How to Play MP3s From The Linux Command Line

By Joshua Price – Aug 11, 2011

How to Use Mail Rules to Manage Your Incoming Emails [Mac]

By Katie Gatto – Jul 21, 2011

How to Install Plasmoids In Kubuntu (KDE)

By Damien Oh – May 18, 2011

How to Make A (sort of) Song Template in GarageBand

By Katie Gatto – May 2, 2011

What Is The thumb.db File?

By tannergodarzi – Apr 23, 2011

How to Convert Mac .Pages Format Into .Jpeg

By Katie Gatto – Apr 21, 2011

How to Batch Convert and Resize Images with Converseen

Effortlessly convert and resize images with Converseen. Free and easy-to-use software for all your image conversion needs.

By Tavis J. Hampton – Apr 20, 2011

How to Easily Resize Window In Gnome [Quick Tips]

By Damien Oh – Mar 20, 2011

How to Install And Configure Apache In Ubuntu

By Damien Oh – Mar 9, 2011

How to Convert Mac Font (dfont) to Windows Compatible Font (ttf)

By Damien Oh – Feb 28, 2011

How to View Past Notifications In Ubuntu

By Damien Oh – Feb 18, 2011

How to Make Use of File Streams to Store Confidential Text Information

Microsoft used file streams to store information of a file. In this tutorial, you will learn about file streams and how you can put them to good use.

By Angel Luis – Feb 12, 2011

How to Theme Up Lubuntu

By Damien Oh – Feb 11, 2011

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When Sony shipped the first Walkman in 1979, chairman Akio Morita insisted on a second headphone jack and a “hotline” talk button, convinced it would be rude for one person to listen to music alone — and within a few years buyers had ignored the sociable features so completely that Sony quietly dropped them

Jun 15, 2026

Russia still custom-builds the Soyuz return seats for ISS crew members using plaster casts taken weeks before launch, because astronauts grow as much as five centimetres taller during a long-duration stay and a seat moulded to their Earth-shaped spine would no longer fit the body that comes home

Jun 12, 2026

Mycorrhizal fungi colonised plant roots roughly 450 million years ago and biologists now suspect plants could never have moved out of the oceans onto bare rock without them, meaning every forest on Earth — including the redwoods, the Amazon, and the boreal belt — is still running on a partnership older than trees themselves

Jun 11, 2026

Close-up of a young adult using a smartphone outdoors, highlighting modern technology and connectivity.

The “CrackBerry” nickname stuck for a reason — and the variable-reward psychology that hooked early-2000s executives on their BlackBerrys is the exact same machinery now running every push notification on every smartphone in your pocket

Jun 11, 2026

Intricate network of tree roots and moss on a forest hillside, showcasing nature's resilience.

Suzanne Simard sealed paper birch and Douglas fir seedlings inside plastic bags, fed them carbon-14 and carbon-13 dioxide, and nine days later found carbon had crossed between species through fungal threads in the British Columbia soil beneath her boots

Jun 10, 2026

Close-up of glowing jellyfish swimming gracefully in deep green ocean waters.

A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.

Jun 10, 2026

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Make Tech Easier provides tech tutorials, reviews, tips and tricks to help you navigate the complicated world of technology. We aim to uncomplicate the complicated, making your life easier.

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