PCWorld’s Greatest PC Tips of All Time

by justin on January 8, 2010

Here’s an article i found really helpful from the February 2010 PC World magazine

Toggle between apps: Use <Alt>-<Tab> to switch open programs without touching your mouse. The oldest—and still   the best — Windows timesaver.

Navigate app windows: Press <Ctrl>-<Tab> to cycle through an application’s windows (or through a Web browser’s tabs). First cousin of the tip above, and probably the most underrated tip ever.

When in doubt, type it out: If you don’t want to hunt through nested menus and the like, you can access most functions, applets, or = les the old-fashioned way—by entering them into the Search box. Type Calculator, Control Panel, or even the name of a piece of music on your hard drive, and press <Enter>.

Unobtrusive updates: Keep your OS current by opening Windows Update (Automatic Update in XP) and setting it to Download updates but let me choose whether to install them. (To get there, press the <Windows> key and type Windows Update.) That way, you won’t have Windows urging you to restart when you don’t want to (or worse, triggering a restart when you’re away from the PC with an unsaved document open).

Tweak your taskbar: Right-click the Taskbar and choose Properties to find options for switching to the old Start menu, choosing which icons show in the notification area, setting default programs to appear in the Start bar menu, and more.

Full-frontal folders: In Windows Explorer, click Folder Options (located under the Organize menu) to reveal hidden files, show the full path in the title bar, display = le extensions, and more.

Partition, partition, partition: Make backups and restores easier by partitioning your hard drive (see find.pcworld.com/64173 for details) and keeping one partition for the OS and the other for your documents and data.

Make your text special: Need a special character such as © or á? Press the <Windows> key and type character map in the field to bring up an app that will let you copy and paste the characters you need.

Sticky keys (the good kind): Holding down two keys at once—such as <Ctrl>-C to copy—is a royal pain. Press the <Shift> key five times to start Sticky Keys, a feature that allows you to initiate a keyboard shortcut by merely pressing <Shift >, <Ctrl>, <Alt>, or <Windows> instead of holding that particular key down. Press <Shift> = ve more times to toggle Sticky Keys o[ .

Simple screen capture: Take a screenshot by pressing <Print Screen>, which copies an image of your full screen to your clipboard so that you can paste it into Paint or your preferred image editor. To capture just the active window, use <Ctrl>-<Alt>-<Print Screen>. For more = ne-tuned controls, try Screenshot Captor (fi nd.pcworld.com/64174).

Take a shortcut: Right-click on any application icon, bring up the Properties menu, and click the Shortcuts tab. You can specify a keystroke combination to start your application here. Our personal favorite: Making a shortcut for Windows 7’s Snipping Tool makes screenshots much easier. (Windows 7 only)

Line ’em up: Want to arrange two (or more) windows side by side in Windows XP or Vista? Hold down <Ctrl> and click on the desired windows in the taskbar; then right-click the taskbar and select ! le Vertically. In Windows 7, you can simply drag any open window to the right or le/ edge of your screen and then let go.

Instant classic (control panels): Miss Windows’ old Control Panel, which conveniently displayed all of its items at once? In Windows XP and Vista, just open the Control Panel and select Switch to Classic View. In Windows 7, click the View by drop-down menu in the upper-right corner and select your preference.

Speed Up Your Services

Manage the Task Manager: Windows’ built-in Task Manager (press <Ctrl>-<Alt>-<Del> and click Task Manager) is great for seeing what your system is up to, but power users will prefer Process Explorer(find.pcworld.com/64175), which shows more details that can help you find a memory leak or troubleshoot a pesky DLL problem.

Index this, not that: From the Windows Search indexer speeds up built-in search functions, but the indexing process itself can consume system resources at inconvenient times. Open Indexing Options in Control Panel (or press the <Windows> key and type Indexing Options). F e resulting dialog box will let you specify which folders or types of data are indexed to avoid bogging down your PC needlessly.

Clean up your startup: If your PC drags its feet during the startup process, press the <Windows> key and type msconfig to open the System Configuration utility. Check in the Startup tab to see what your machine is loading. Your computer might be loading services or apps that you don’t need or want to use on startup.

Nudge your network: If you have network problems, try opening the command prompt (enter cmd in the Start menu’s search box) and typing ipconfi g /renew to reset your network connection.

Sharing is caring: For a little assistance in tracking your shared folders, right-click My Computer (or Computer in Windows 7) and click Manage to bring up the Computer Management tool. F en click Shared Folders to see a list of all of your machine’s shared folders, D le-sharing sessions, and open D les.

Essential Add-Ons

Look, Ma, no mouse: XP users should grab Launchy (fi nd.pcworld.com/64176), a free keyboard-driven launcher application that allows you to access programs, D les, and even Websites with just a few keystrokes. (Vista and Windows 7 users get the same functionality from the Start menu’s search tool.)

Cleaner than you found it: To make sure that your programs uninstall completely, use Revo Uninstaller (find.pcworld.com/62049)—it’s o/ en more thorough than the programs’ own supplied uninstaller routines.

Annoyance buster: If you’re tired of User Account Control dialog boxes popping up all the time in Windows Vista, but you don’t want to disable the security feature completely, grab TweakUAC (fi nd.pcworld.com/61960) to set it to Quiet Mode. Windows 7 has its own UAC controls, but can still benefit from TweakUAC.

Get your hands dirty with Greasemonkey: Optimize your Web browsing with Greasemonkey for Firefox (fi nd.pcworld.com/61166), an add-on that lets you choose among thousands of user-designed scripts (userscripts.org) for blocking ads, changing the layouts of popular sites, and more. (Variants also exist for Internet Explorer, Chrome, and Safari; see find.pcworld.com/64197.)

Work Your Windows Key

Lock your doors (and Windows): Stepping out for a minute? Remember to press <Windows>-L to lock your  computer’s screen so that no one can nose around without entering your account password.

Run, Windows, run: To access the Run command easily, press <Windows>-R.

Keyboard explorer: Want to open a new Windows Explorer window without leaving the keyboard? Press <Windows>-E.

Declutter your desktop: Access your desktop instantly by pressing <Windows>-D to hide all of your open windows. Press <Windows>-D again to return to where you were before.

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