5 Windows 11 Features You’re Probably Not Using (But Should Be)
It’s simple, but it works—and it’s already installed. If you have RGB keyboards, mice, or components from different brands (Corsair, Razer, Logitech), you know the pain of running three different control apps.
It won’t replace advanced effects, but for basic brightness, color, and wave patterns across devices? One unified control panel. No extra bloatware. If you own an Android phone, you don’t need a cable or third-party cloud sync.
But beneath that familiar surface, Windows 11 is packed with features that can genuinely change how you work. Here are five hidden(ish) gems you should turn on today. You’ve heard of voice typing. But Voice Access is different. It lets you control your entire PC with your voice—clicking, scrolling, opening apps, even using keyboard shortcuts.
Windows 11 now includes (introduced in 2023, but still overlooked).