Arthur opened his browser—Chrome—and navigated to a random website. He found a "Support" email link: support@weirdgadgets.com . He clicked.
He opened the Microsoft Store, fingers drumming against his desk. He searched for "Edge Deflector" – a beloved tool killed by Microsoft years ago. Gone. Then he found it: – a tiny, open-source utility with 847 stars on GitHub and a warning: "Use at your own risk. Microsoft may break me tomorrow." make gmail default email windows 11
Every time he clicked an email link—a "Contact Us" button, a password reset, a meeting invite—Windows 11 would rip him out of his browser and fling him into the cold, blue wasteland of the built-in Mail app. It was slow. It lacked his Gmail labels. It felt like being forced to drink tap water when you have a chilled bottle of San Pellegrino on your desk. He opened the Microsoft Store, fingers drumming against
Arthur was a man of systems. His Windows 11 desktop was a symphony of pinned taskbar icons, color-coded folders, and automated scripts. But one thing haunted his digital sanctuary: the . Then he found it: – a tiny, open-source
Gmail’s compose window appeared. The "To" field was already filled. His signature was there. His labels were intact.
For one terrible second, nothing happened. Then, a new Chrome tab opened. The URL flickered: https://mail.google.com/mail/?extsrc=mailto&url=mailto%3Asupport%40weirdgadgets.com
He clicked with the satisfaction of a king signing a peace treaty. Test Time.