Google’s delightful Chrome Music Lab is designed for kids like you

It’s not often that Google’s charm offensives are successful—case in point, the Android weather frog—but in the case of Google’s Chrome Music Lab, it wildly succeeds. Check this article from PCWorld.com

New Microsoft Edge extensions may have a ripple effect on Windows gaming

Please try to contain your excitement: Microsoft will reportedly begin seeding Windows Insider builds with support for the long-awaited Edge browser extensions in the near future. Yawn. But if you’re a gamer, there might be some good news here. Check this article from PCWorld.com

8 Surprising Ways You Can Import Data into Microsoft Word

Microsoft Word is the de facto standard program for Office documents, from research papers to professional reports. But sometimes you have data in another program that you need to reference; it might be in Excel, it might be a PDF, it could even be another Word document. Knowing how to import that data can save you a lot of time. More of this article from MakeUseOf.com

Speed Up Tab Handling on Chrome with These 7 Extensions

Chrome’s built-in tab management features can help you manage tabs well, but extensions from the Chrome Web Store can do that job even better. Check this article from MakeUseOf.com

Windows 10 Does Have a Hibernation Mode — Here’s How to Turn It O

You probably often use the Shut Down and Restart options (especially since it fixes so many problems) in Windows, but there are a couple of others that go unnoticed.Check this article from MakeUseOf.com

How to Improve Windows Performance with a New File System

Want to beef up your Windows PC? You can boost software performance and storage reliability with two technologies: Redundant Array of Independent Drives (RAID) and Microsoft’s Resilient File System (ReFS). The only requirement is, at least, two spare drives. Check this article from MakeUseOf.com

Tired of waiting for websites to load? This new tech can cut the time by more than half

Slow-loading Web pages are surely one of the top frustrations on the Internet today, but new technology from MIT and Harvard promises to change all that. Announced on Wednesday, Polaris is a framework that determines how to sequence the downloading of a page’s objects for faster load times overall. More of this article from PCWorld.com