Corners In Windows 11 - How To Disable Rounded
Just keep a system restore point handy.
The question is not why you would disable rounded corners. The question is how , given Microsoft’s active resistance to reverting this change. Unlike previous Windows versions, Windows 11 does not expose any native setting—not in Registry, not in Group Policy, not in the Settings app—to globally disable rounded corners. Microsoft hard-coded the corner rendering into the new win32u.dll and the DWM (Desktop Window Manager) composition pipeline. Rounded corners are applied at the window frame level, before your application even gets a chance to render its client area. how to disable rounded corners in windows 11
For the majority of users, the pragmatic path is acceptance. For the rest of you—the corner-cutters, the pixel purists, the window-tilers—the hacks above remain your only weapons. Just keep a system restore point handy
But for a significant subset of users—power users, pixel-perfect designers, developers, and those with specific visual sensitivities or workflow requirements—rounded corners are not a feature. They are a bug. They waste screen real estate, break precise window-snapping layouts, create rendering artifacts in legacy apps, and clash with the sharp, rigid geometries of professional design tools. Unlike previous Windows versions, Windows 11 does not
So, would you say that the Biden administration believes in Keynesian method? I ask because during the pandemic when unemployment rates were above the natural rate, the solution was to distribute stimulus checks. (Which, after reading this, I now understand why that was! I’ve learned so much reading about these things. Very well written.)
Yes, most politicians, including Biden but also many Republicans, favor the short run and support “stimulus packages”. But it is a stimulus for the short run only (just like taking hard drugs). In the long run, the negative effects (increase in the national debt, inflation, etc.) harm the economy.
Thank you for your feedback, Yulisa!
If you have a reduction in work hours due to an employers lack of business demand. Can you still apply for partial Unemployment benefits in NJ?
Good question, Larry. Perhaps someone can Internet search for this and find out. Any New Jersey residents out there?