 In the mid-2000s, there was a team of software developers who were tasked with creating the latest version of the Windows operating system, Windows 6. It was the year 2006, and the team had been working tirelessly for months to create what they believed would be the most advanced and user-friendly operating system ever made. However, as the release dates drew near, strange things began to happen. The team started reporting mysterious bugs and glitches that couldn't be explained. Files would disappear, screens would flicker, and the computer would freeze at the most inconvenient times. Despite their best efforts, the team wasn't able to fix these issues, and so Windows 6 was released to the public with these glitches still present. And that's when things started to get really weird. Users began to report strange occurrences when using Windows 6. Some said that their computers would turn on by themselves in the middle of the night, with the operating system running in the background. Others claimed that they could hear strange whispers coming from their speakers, even when the computer was turned off. But the most unsettling reports came from users who claimed that they had seen a ghostly figure on their computer screens. It was said to be a woman with long, flowing hair and a pale face, who would stare at the user with empty eyes. When they tried to click away from the screen, the figure would follow their cursor, no matter where they moved it. As more and more people reported these strange occurrences, rumors began to circulate that the glitches in Windows 6 were intentional, that the developers had deliberately programmed them as a way to haunt their users. Despite these rumors, Microsoft denied any intentional wrongdoing and released patches to fix the glitches. But for some users, it was too late. They had already been spooked by the ghostly figure on their screens, and they could never use Windows 6 again without feeling a sense of a need. To this day, some people claim that the ghosts of Windows 6 still haunt their computers, waiting to be seen by unsuspecting users.