Friday, February 13, 2026

Are you still running Windows 10?

 

If you’re still using Windows 10 as your daily operating system, you’re not alone. Millions of PCs around the world continue to rely on it. But as we move further into 2026, sticking with Windows 10 comes with growing security and usability risks that are becoming harder to ignore.

Graphic showing Windows 10 upgrade pathways

The Security Problem

Windows 10 officially reached end of support in October 2025. That means no more regular security updates, no more bug fixes, and no guarantees that newly discovered vulnerabilities will be patched. While your PC won’t suddenly stop working, it will become increasingly exposed over time.

Cybercriminals actively target unsupported systems because they know weaknesses won’t be fixed. New exploits, ransomware strains, and browser-based attacks are often designed to take advantage of outdated software. Even if you use antivirus software, it cannot compensate for operating system–level vulnerabilities.

There’s also the software compatibility issue. New versions of browsers, productivity tools, and hardware drivers will gradually drop support for Windows 10. Over time, you may find that applications either won’t install or won’t receive updates—creating further security gaps.

Option 1: Upgrade to Windows 11

The most straightforward path is upgrading to Windows 11. It includes improved security features such as enhanced hardware-based isolation, stricter driver requirements, and better protection against firmware attacks.

Microsoft enforces stricter hardware requirements for Windows 11, including TPM 2.0 and newer CPUs. However, many users have successfully installed Windows 11 on unsupported hardware using workarounds. While this isn’t officially recommended, it can extend the life of slightly older machines and still provide access to current security updates. Just be aware that future updates aren’t guaranteed on unsupported systems.

If your hardware is relatively modern (2018 or newer), upgrading is often smooth and worthwhile.

Option 2: Switch to Linux

If your PC doesn’t meet Windows 11 requirements—or you’d simply prefer an alternative—Linux is more accessible than ever.

Distributions like Linux Mint and Zorin OS are designed specifically for users transitioning from Windows. They offer familiar desktop layouts, strong community support, and regular security updates. They also run well on older hardware, often giving aging PCs a second life.

While some specialized Windows software may not run natively, web-based tools and open-source alternatives cover most everyday needs.

The Bottom Line

Continuing to run Windows 10 in 2026 means accepting increasing security and compatibility risks. Whether you choose to upgrade to Windows 11—even on unsupported hardware—or explore a user-friendly Linux distribution, taking action now is far safer than waiting for a problem to force your hand.

Your operating system is the foundation of your digital life. Make sure it’s still being protected.

Friday, February 6, 2026

Help! My digital files are a mess!

 If your desktop looks like a confetti explosion of random screenshots, mystery PDFs, and files called “final_FINAL2_revised_USETHISONE”… you’re not alone. Digital clutter sneaks up fast. The good news? A simple system can turn chaos into calm — and save you serious time (and stress).

Step 1: Set up a simple digital filing system

Think broad first, detailed later. Create 5–7 main folders that reflect your life, not your devices. For example:

  • Work

  • Personal

  • Finances

  • Photos

  • Admin

  • Learning

  • Archive

Inside those, add subfolders only when needed. Example:
Finances → 2026 → Taxes or Photos → 2025 → Holidays.

Use consistent naming. A great format is:
YYYY-MM-DD – Description
Like: 2026-01-15 – Car Insurance Renewal

Files now sort themselves in date order. Magic.

Step 2: Organise what you already have

Don’t try to sort everything at once — that’s how people give up.

  1. Start with one location (Desktop, Downloads, or Documents).

  2. Sort by file type or date.

  3. Move files into your new folder system.

  4. Delete obvious junk (old installers, blurry photos, random downloads).

Use the “touch it once” rule: when you pick a file, decide immediately — keep, move, or delete.

Step 3: Find and remove duplicates

Duplicates quietly eat storage and create confusion. Search your computer for terms like:

  • “copy”

  • “final”

  • “v2”

  • “edited”

Sort by file size to spot identical large files. There are also duplicate-finder tools (like Gemini, CCleaner, or built-in photo duplicate detection on many systems) that compare files automatically.

Before deleting, double-check — especially with photos and documents.

Step 4: Back it up (seriously, do this)

Organisation is great. Losing everything is not.

Use the 3–2–1 rule:

  • 3 copies of important files

  • 2 different storage types (computer + external drive)

  • 1 off-site (cloud backup)

Cloud services (Google Drive, iCloud, OneDrive, Dropbox) protect against theft, spills, and hardware failure. An external hard drive protects you if your cloud account has issues.

Set backups to run automatically. Future You will be deeply grateful.


 A tidy digital space isn’t about perfection. It’s about knowing where things are and trusting they’re safe. Once the system’s in place, maintenance takes minutes — and your brain gets a whole lot more breathing room.

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