The top
33 Windows 10 tips, tricks, hacks, and tweaks.
Have you
made the switch to Windows 10 on your primary operating system? With it being
free, and Microsoft pushing the update to users, most of you probably already
have. And if you haven’t, listen. XP is dead.
Oh, yeah,
Windows 10 is awesome. To help you get even more of the awesome out of Windows
10, we’ve scoured the web to provide you with the top 33 Windows 10 tips,
tricks, hacks, and tweaks for your computing pleasure. Anyway, check out these
cool tips and more to see if you can get some more cool factor out of 10.
1. Enable
virtual desktops
For
starters, yes, Linux has had this for years. I usually have six in my tray in
KDE and mouse through them like a boss. But this is Windows, and it’s great to
have this finally. To turn on virtual desktops, Win+Tab to get the Aero view,
then click “+New Desktop” down in the lower right. You can have as many as you
want, and switch between them by clicking the Desktop icon next to the search box.
2. Print
to PDF
There is
finally a built-in PDF printer in Windows 10. To print anything as PDF file,
just pick the “Microsoft Print to PDF” printer.
3. Use
Wi-Fi Sense to make getting online easy
Much
maligned, and definitely misunderstood, Wi-Fi Sense is actually pretty cool,
when you’re not an enterprise security admin. This lets you identify and share
Wi-Fi hotspots with your contacts, including the PSK to get onto them, so if
you set up a guest network at home, have a guest network at work, or find one
at your favourite coffee shop, you can share the details with your contacts,
and they can do the same with you. Of course, it requires that the networks are
either open or use a pre-shared key. If your “enterprise” Wi-Fi network is
using PSK, you’re doing it wrong! Of course, you can turn it off.
Favourites
in Explorer has replaced the Quick Access menu, and it’s much cooler. With
several options you can use to customize your experience, you can make Windows
10 do just what you want. Here’s a rundown.
4. Open
File Explorer to:
This lets
you choose whether to default to Quick access, or the “This PC” view.
5. Show
recently used files in Quick access
Turn it off
if you don’t want to see the MRU list of files.
6. Show
recently used folders in Quick access
As above.
Turn it off if you don’t want to see the MRU list of folders, but odds are good
that will prove to be dead useful!
7. Clear
Something in
the MRU list you’d rather not have showing? Hit Clear to drop the list like
your browser history!
Customize
the shell
There are
new and subtle settings in the Command Prompt and/or PowerShell lets you make
all kinds of cool customizations above and beyond just tweaking colours. On the
Options tab, check out the following.
8. Filter
clipboard contents on paste
This is
totally awesome, especially when pasting from a browser. It will swap smart
quotes to straight quotes, and remove tabs so your pastes are what you want.
9. Enable
line wrapping selection
Thank you
jeebus! This does exactly what it says.
10.
Copy/Paste
Yes, in both
PowerShell and the command prompt, your CTRL-C, -X, and –V keys work now.
11.
Persistent command history
You know how
up and down arrows let you scroll through your command history. Guess what?
Your history now persists, so when you open a shell, your commands from last
time are available. How cool is that?
12.
Extended text selection keys
Let’s you
use home, end, shift arrows, CTRL-C, CTRL-X, and CTRL-V just like you are
accustomed to in just about every other text program ever. Up and down arrows
still scroll through the command buffer, but I don’t think you’d really want to
get rid of that.
13. Wrap
text output on resize
Okay, this
is on the Layout tab, but it’s still new. If you do have to resize a shell
window, this will wrap the text to match.
14.
Opacity
Sure, we
have had this in Linux shells for years. So what? Now we have it in Windows,
and it’s just as cool. Practical? Maybe not. But still, cool! I like 90%. It’s
dense enough to read, but still lets me see what is behind it.
If you don’t
see those options, clear the checkbox next to “Use legacy console (requires
relaunch)” and, well, relaunch!
15. Get
more fonts
Want to add
other fonts to the shell? Me too! Here’s how.
1. First, you have to use monospaced True
type fonts.
2. Launch regedit and navigate to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows
NT\CurrentVersion\Console\TrueTypeFont
3. Create a new REG_SZ and give it a unique
number
4. Enter the name of the True type Font you
want to use.
5. Reboot to make it available.
16. Shake
it off
If you want
to disable the Aero shake thing that causes all open windows to minimize,
there’s an easy reg-hack to do so.
Launch
regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Windows.
Create a new
key called Explorer
Create a new
DWORD(32) names NoWindowsMinimizingShortcuts
Set it to 1.
17.
Disable the startup delay
If your
machine is screaming fast to boot, uses an SSD, and is otherwise a rocket, you
can get even more speed by disabling the startup delay that Windows includes by
default to keep from overtaxing your hardware.
Launch
regedit and navigate to
CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Serialize
Create a new
DWORD named StartupDelayInMSec
Set it to 0.
18.
Background scrolling
Check it
out. You can mouse over another windows and scroll it without clicking on it
first, stealing focus from your active window. That’s dead useful when one
window is instructions, and the other is the shell you are trying to enter
command within!
Check out
all these keyboard shortcuts
Some of
these are tried and true, but some may be new to you, and all work great in
Windows 10.
19.
Windows Key-A launches the Action Center
20.
Windows Key-I launches the Settings App
21.
Windows Key-X launches the Power User Menu
22.
Windows Key-R launches the Run dialog
23.
Windows Key-Tab brings up the task view
24.
Windows Key-Right-Up moves the active app to top right quadrant
25.
Windows Key-Ctrl-Left or Right navigates across your virtual desktops
26.
Windows Key-Ctrl-D creates a new virtual desktop
27.
Windows Key-S brings up the Daily Glance for weather, news, sports, etc.
28.
Windows Key-Ctrl-F4 closes the active virtual desktop
29.
Windows Key-Up and Down snaps the active app to top or bottom of screen or
maximizes it.
30. Get
back more taskbar by losing the Search bar
Cortana is
cool and all that, but if you don’t use the “Ask me anything” box, you can buy
back a lot of taskbar real estate by turning that off. Here’s how.
1. Right-click the task bar.
2. Choose Cortana options
3. Remove the checkbox next to “Show search
box.”
31. Last Active
Click
My favourite
hack in this list is this one. I may have a dozen tabs open in IE at any point
in time. If I click on another app, then have to get back to the tab I was on
and click on the E icon, it pops up all the open tabs and even the windows so I
have to figure out which one I was on. With this hack, if I just click, it
takes me back to exactly the tab I was on. This works the same on other apps
too, so if I had seventeen Word docs open, it would just take me right back to
the last one I was active in when I click the icon.
1.Open
regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Advanced
2. Create a new 32bit Dword called
LastActiveClick.
3. Set it to 1.
4. Profit!
32. Find
the hidden images
The lock
screen and logon screen have some really cool images, which as it turns out, by
default both rotate AND change. Seems Microsoft has a CDN that updates these
images based on what you click that like or not. Want to save one or more of
those images for future use? Here’s where they are hiding!
1. Open Explorer and brows to %localappdata%\Packages\Microsoft.ContentDeliveryManager_[custom
string of characters]\LocalState\Assets\
2. Copy all of the files to a new directory.
3. Open a command prompt in that directory.
4. Run this command
ren *.*
*.png [enter]
5. Browse through them and find the ones you
like!
33.
Battery saver settings let you get every single mA out of your battery
The Battery
saver settings can help extend your laptop’s battery life when you’re at 32K
feet and not in first class. Go to Settings, Battery saver, and make sure it is
set to come on. You can adjust when it does come on based on estimated battery
life remaining, and what it does to help extend things, like reducing the
screen brightness and limiting the apps that can run in the background and do
push notifications. Since those need CPU and Wi-Fi to work, limiting the things
running in the background can really make a difference.
With so many
cool tweaks and hacks, you should have found something neat and new to help you
pimp your desktop, but I am sure we missed some of the best. So if you have a
favourite hack or tweak that makes Windows 10 your pawn, leave a comment and
let us know what you’ve done. Thanks!
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