• Landing Page
  • Shop
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Login
  • Register
Upgrade
TrivDaily
">
  • WorldNew
    Pound

    Pound hits 37-year low against dollar

    Palm Trees - WIND

    Hurricane Tracker : Tropical Storm Hurricane Nine has the potential to reach Florida

    Prince of Wales - TrivDaily

    Princess Diana’s title has been passed on to the Duchess of Cambridge

    TrivDaily - King Charles Speech

    3 main points to be gleaned from King Charles first public speech

    Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb’ dies

    Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb’ dies

    The Afghanistan airport explosion came about beneathneath Biden however lines lower back to Trump

    The Afghanistan airport explosion came about beneathneath Biden however lines lower back to Trump

    Hibernian  beat Arsenal 2-1 in first preseason game on Easter Road

    Hibernian beat Arsenal 2-1 in first preseason game on Easter Road

    After a “racist” tweet against England black players, comedian Andrew Lawrence’s agent cancelled his appearance in show.

    After a “racist” tweet against England black players, comedian Andrew Lawrence’s agent cancelled his appearance in show.

    Lionel Messi, Argentina win Copa America over Brazil

    Lionel Messi, Argentina win Copa America over Brazil

    Trending Tags

    • Lifestyle
      UK weather maps show exact date 7cm of snow and 63mph winds to batter Britain

      UK weather maps show exact date 7cm of snow and 63mph winds to batter Britain

      bet365 bonus code: Secure £30 bonus for Atalanta vs Chelsea trip with code SUN365

      bet365 bonus code: Secure £30 bonus for Atalanta vs Chelsea trip with code SUN365

      Crystal Palace into Champions League places as Guehi scores late winner at Fulham

      UK snow maps show 3-day barrage hitting 10 counties with -6C freeze

      UK snow maps show 3-day barrage hitting 10 counties with -6C freeze

      Hundreds of Man Utd fans stuck outside Old Trafford for West Ham clash with turnstile chaos ‘worst ever seen’

      Hundreds of Man Utd fans stuck outside Old Trafford for West Ham clash with turnstile chaos ‘worst ever seen’

      ARTE and Suspilne Ukraine sign an association agreement to strengthen cooperation

      ARTE and Suspilne Ukraine sign an association agreement to strengthen cooperation

      Trending Tags

      • Pandemic
    • Business
      Danger to Life’ as Storm Bram Batters Devon and Cornwall With Flooding and 90mph Winds

      Danger to Life’ as Storm Bram Batters Devon and Cornwall With Flooding and 90mph Winds

      Zelensky Rushes to London as Trump Accuses Him Over Peace Plan and Kremlin Applauds US Pressure

      Zelensky Rushes to London as Trump Accuses Him Over Peace Plan and Kremlin Applauds US Pressure

      Transmasculine Non-Binary Identity Explained As XG’s Cocona Comes Out

      Transmasculine Non-Binary Identity Explained As XG’s Cocona Comes Out

      Damson Idris and Lori Harvey Ignite ‘Back Together’ Speculation After Unexpected PDA at Art Basel Miami

      Damson Idris and Lori Harvey Ignite ‘Back Together’ Speculation After Unexpected PDA at Art Basel Miami

      Chris Hemsworth, Elsa Pataky Divorce Rumours: Wedding Rings Off As Couple ‘Drift Apart’

      Chris Hemsworth, Elsa Pataky Divorce Rumours: Wedding Rings Off As Couple ‘Drift Apart’

      Miss Universe 2025 Scandal: Why Fatima Bosch Refuses to Step Down Amid Claims of a ‘Predetermined’ Victory

      Miss Universe 2025 Scandal: Why Fatima Bosch Refuses to Step Down Amid Claims of a ‘Predetermined’ Victory

      Trending Tags

      • Vaccine
      • Pandemic
    • Entertainment
      Court dismisses £1.5m problem gambling claim against Betfair for second time

      Court dismisses £1.5m problem gambling claim against Betfair for second time

      Sophia Thakur’s Lexicon Is Love

      Sophia Thakur’s Lexicon Is Love

      President Trump awards medals to Sly Stallone, George Strait and more

      President Trump awards medals to Sly Stallone, George Strait and more

      Supplier Supplement: fraudsters, storytelling and technology

      Supplier Supplement: fraudsters, storytelling and technology

      Fred again.. And Blanco Combine On ‘Solo’

      Fred again.. And Blanco Combine On ‘Solo’

      Moonstone Rings: A Timeless Addition to Your Jewelry Collection

      Moonstone Rings: A Timeless Addition to Your Jewelry Collection

      The six Latin American markets the betting industry should keep an eye on

      The six Latin American markets the betting industry should keep an eye on

      Denmark backs “Banko Bill” to set rules of radio & walkie-talkie bingo

      Denmark backs “Banko Bill” to set rules of radio & walkie-talkie bingo

      Peru escalates dispute of Dina’s tax encroachment 

      Peru escalates dispute of Dina’s tax encroachment 

      Trending Tags

      • Sports
        Dusty May: No. 2 Michigan ‘Deserves’ to Be No. 1 After Dominating Villanova

        Dusty May: No. 2 Michigan ‘Deserves’ to Be No. 1 After Dominating Villanova

        AJ Dybantsa’s Career Night, Robert Wright III’s GW Lifts No. 10 BYU Past Clemson

        AJ Dybantsa’s Career Night, Robert Wright III’s GW Lifts No. 10 BYU Past Clemson

        Gen Z Trades Doomscrolling for Real-World Sweat: Key Takeaways from Strava’s 12th Year in Sport Report

        Gen Z Trades Doomscrolling for Real-World Sweat: Key Takeaways from Strava’s 12th Year in Sport Report

        Eagles at Chargers Live Updates | Monday Night Football

        Eagles at Chargers Live Updates | Monday Night Football

        Stake Canada App — Download, Legality, Features & How-To (2025)

        Stake Canada App — Download, Legality, Features & How-To (2025)

        Buccaneers’ NFC South Chances Take Massive Hit After Loss to Saints

        Buccaneers’ NFC South Chances Take Massive Hit After Loss to Saints

        Dallas Cowboys may have found a late-round gem in WR Ryan Flournoy

        Dallas Cowboys may have found a late-round gem in WR Ryan Flournoy

        Cowboys 2025 rookie report: Rookie class was flat in battle against the Lions

        Cowboys 2025 rookie report: Rookie class was flat in battle against the Lions

        Rockets’ Kevin Durant Latest to Score 31K Career Points During Win vs. Suns

        Rockets’ Kevin Durant Latest to Score 31K Career Points During Win vs. Suns

        Trending Tags

        • Travel
          Football’s biggest names including Mbappe and Haaland rally behind Mohamed Salah after Liverpool axe

          Football’s biggest names including Mbappe and Haaland rally behind Mohamed Salah after Liverpool axe

          Man Utd face Premier League bogey side and Arsenal travel to former winners as full FA Cup Third Round draw revealed

          Man Utd face Premier League bogey side and Arsenal travel to former winners as full FA Cup Third Round draw revealed

          Finding stillness in Kyoto: My solo journey through Japan’s most peaceful retreats

          Finding stillness in Kyoto: My solo journey through Japan’s most peaceful retreats

          Saudi giants enquire about Liverpool star Salah

          Saudi giants enquire about Liverpool star Salah

          Christmas chaos warning as staff set to strike at major UK airport

          Christmas chaos warning as staff set to strike at major UK airport

          How volcanic eruptions brought the Black Death to Europe

          How volcanic eruptions brought the Black Death to Europe

          Trending Tags

          • Technology
            UK to Europe: The time to counter Russia’s information war machine is now

            UK to Europe: The time to counter Russia’s information war machine is now

            Affection for Excel spans generations, from Boomers to Zoomers

            Affection for Excel spans generations, from Boomers to Zoomers

            Trump’s EPA Plans to Raise Threshold for ‘Safe’ Formaldehyde Exposure

            Trump’s EPA Plans to Raise Threshold for ‘Safe’ Formaldehyde Exposure

            A New Meta Quest Probably Won’t Happen in 2026

            A New Meta Quest Probably Won’t Happen in 2026

            And the winner of the Microsoft Christmas sweater is…

            And the winner of the Microsoft Christmas sweater is…

            Death to one-time text codes: Passkeys are the new hotness in MFA

            Death to one-time text codes: Passkeys are the new hotness in MFA

            Trending Tags

            • Real Estate
              Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

              Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

              #1 UK housing: renting has turn out to be less expensive than shopping

              #1 UK housing: renting has turn out to be less expensive than shopping

              UK assets marketplace pastime maintains at record-breaking levels

              UK assets marketplace pastime maintains at record-breaking levels

              GUUD Launches New RYTE Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible for All Businesses

              GUUD Launches New RYTE Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible for All Businesses

              Climate Finance Partnership Raises US$250 Million at First Close to Invest in Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

              Climate Finance Partnership Raises US$250 Million at First Close to Invest in Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

              Interior Jennifer Lopez’s luxe Miami rental: 5 stress-free details in regards to the mansion

              Interior Jennifer Lopez’s luxe Miami rental: 5 stress-free details in regards to the mansion

              Trending Tags

              No Result
              View All Result
              • WorldNew
                Pound

                Pound hits 37-year low against dollar

                Palm Trees - WIND

                Hurricane Tracker : Tropical Storm Hurricane Nine has the potential to reach Florida

                Prince of Wales - TrivDaily

                Princess Diana’s title has been passed on to the Duchess of Cambridge

                TrivDaily - King Charles Speech

                3 main points to be gleaned from King Charles first public speech

                Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb’ dies

                Abdul Qadeer Khan: ‘Father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb’ dies

                The Afghanistan airport explosion came about beneathneath Biden however lines lower back to Trump

                The Afghanistan airport explosion came about beneathneath Biden however lines lower back to Trump

                Hibernian  beat Arsenal 2-1 in first preseason game on Easter Road

                Hibernian beat Arsenal 2-1 in first preseason game on Easter Road

                After a “racist” tweet against England black players, comedian Andrew Lawrence’s agent cancelled his appearance in show.

                After a “racist” tweet against England black players, comedian Andrew Lawrence’s agent cancelled his appearance in show.

                Lionel Messi, Argentina win Copa America over Brazil

                Lionel Messi, Argentina win Copa America over Brazil

                Trending Tags

                • Lifestyle
                  UK weather maps show exact date 7cm of snow and 63mph winds to batter Britain

                  UK weather maps show exact date 7cm of snow and 63mph winds to batter Britain

                  bet365 bonus code: Secure £30 bonus for Atalanta vs Chelsea trip with code SUN365

                  bet365 bonus code: Secure £30 bonus for Atalanta vs Chelsea trip with code SUN365

                  Crystal Palace into Champions League places as Guehi scores late winner at Fulham

                  UK snow maps show 3-day barrage hitting 10 counties with -6C freeze

                  UK snow maps show 3-day barrage hitting 10 counties with -6C freeze

                  Hundreds of Man Utd fans stuck outside Old Trafford for West Ham clash with turnstile chaos ‘worst ever seen’

                  Hundreds of Man Utd fans stuck outside Old Trafford for West Ham clash with turnstile chaos ‘worst ever seen’

                  ARTE and Suspilne Ukraine sign an association agreement to strengthen cooperation

                  ARTE and Suspilne Ukraine sign an association agreement to strengthen cooperation

                  Trending Tags

                  • Pandemic
                • Business
                  Danger to Life’ as Storm Bram Batters Devon and Cornwall With Flooding and 90mph Winds

                  Danger to Life’ as Storm Bram Batters Devon and Cornwall With Flooding and 90mph Winds

                  Zelensky Rushes to London as Trump Accuses Him Over Peace Plan and Kremlin Applauds US Pressure

                  Zelensky Rushes to London as Trump Accuses Him Over Peace Plan and Kremlin Applauds US Pressure

                  Transmasculine Non-Binary Identity Explained As XG’s Cocona Comes Out

                  Transmasculine Non-Binary Identity Explained As XG’s Cocona Comes Out

                  Damson Idris and Lori Harvey Ignite ‘Back Together’ Speculation After Unexpected PDA at Art Basel Miami

                  Damson Idris and Lori Harvey Ignite ‘Back Together’ Speculation After Unexpected PDA at Art Basel Miami

                  Chris Hemsworth, Elsa Pataky Divorce Rumours: Wedding Rings Off As Couple ‘Drift Apart’

                  Chris Hemsworth, Elsa Pataky Divorce Rumours: Wedding Rings Off As Couple ‘Drift Apart’

                  Miss Universe 2025 Scandal: Why Fatima Bosch Refuses to Step Down Amid Claims of a ‘Predetermined’ Victory

                  Miss Universe 2025 Scandal: Why Fatima Bosch Refuses to Step Down Amid Claims of a ‘Predetermined’ Victory

                  Trending Tags

                  • Vaccine
                  • Pandemic
                • Entertainment
                  Court dismisses £1.5m problem gambling claim against Betfair for second time

                  Court dismisses £1.5m problem gambling claim against Betfair for second time

                  Sophia Thakur’s Lexicon Is Love

                  Sophia Thakur’s Lexicon Is Love

                  President Trump awards medals to Sly Stallone, George Strait and more

                  President Trump awards medals to Sly Stallone, George Strait and more

                  Supplier Supplement: fraudsters, storytelling and technology

                  Supplier Supplement: fraudsters, storytelling and technology

                  Fred again.. And Blanco Combine On ‘Solo’

                  Fred again.. And Blanco Combine On ‘Solo’

                  Moonstone Rings: A Timeless Addition to Your Jewelry Collection

                  Moonstone Rings: A Timeless Addition to Your Jewelry Collection

                  The six Latin American markets the betting industry should keep an eye on

                  The six Latin American markets the betting industry should keep an eye on

                  Denmark backs “Banko Bill” to set rules of radio & walkie-talkie bingo

                  Denmark backs “Banko Bill” to set rules of radio & walkie-talkie bingo

                  Peru escalates dispute of Dina’s tax encroachment 

                  Peru escalates dispute of Dina’s tax encroachment 

                  Trending Tags

                  • Sports
                    Dusty May: No. 2 Michigan ‘Deserves’ to Be No. 1 After Dominating Villanova

                    Dusty May: No. 2 Michigan ‘Deserves’ to Be No. 1 After Dominating Villanova

                    AJ Dybantsa’s Career Night, Robert Wright III’s GW Lifts No. 10 BYU Past Clemson

                    AJ Dybantsa’s Career Night, Robert Wright III’s GW Lifts No. 10 BYU Past Clemson

                    Gen Z Trades Doomscrolling for Real-World Sweat: Key Takeaways from Strava’s 12th Year in Sport Report

                    Gen Z Trades Doomscrolling for Real-World Sweat: Key Takeaways from Strava’s 12th Year in Sport Report

                    Eagles at Chargers Live Updates | Monday Night Football

                    Eagles at Chargers Live Updates | Monday Night Football

                    Stake Canada App — Download, Legality, Features & How-To (2025)

                    Stake Canada App — Download, Legality, Features & How-To (2025)

                    Buccaneers’ NFC South Chances Take Massive Hit After Loss to Saints

                    Buccaneers’ NFC South Chances Take Massive Hit After Loss to Saints

                    Dallas Cowboys may have found a late-round gem in WR Ryan Flournoy

                    Dallas Cowboys may have found a late-round gem in WR Ryan Flournoy

                    Cowboys 2025 rookie report: Rookie class was flat in battle against the Lions

                    Cowboys 2025 rookie report: Rookie class was flat in battle against the Lions

                    Rockets’ Kevin Durant Latest to Score 31K Career Points During Win vs. Suns

                    Rockets’ Kevin Durant Latest to Score 31K Career Points During Win vs. Suns

                    Trending Tags

                    • Travel
                      Football’s biggest names including Mbappe and Haaland rally behind Mohamed Salah after Liverpool axe

                      Football’s biggest names including Mbappe and Haaland rally behind Mohamed Salah after Liverpool axe

                      Man Utd face Premier League bogey side and Arsenal travel to former winners as full FA Cup Third Round draw revealed

                      Man Utd face Premier League bogey side and Arsenal travel to former winners as full FA Cup Third Round draw revealed

                      Finding stillness in Kyoto: My solo journey through Japan’s most peaceful retreats

                      Finding stillness in Kyoto: My solo journey through Japan’s most peaceful retreats

                      Saudi giants enquire about Liverpool star Salah

                      Saudi giants enquire about Liverpool star Salah

                      Christmas chaos warning as staff set to strike at major UK airport

                      Christmas chaos warning as staff set to strike at major UK airport

                      How volcanic eruptions brought the Black Death to Europe

                      How volcanic eruptions brought the Black Death to Europe

                      Trending Tags

                      • Technology
                        UK to Europe: The time to counter Russia’s information war machine is now

                        UK to Europe: The time to counter Russia’s information war machine is now

                        Affection for Excel spans generations, from Boomers to Zoomers

                        Affection for Excel spans generations, from Boomers to Zoomers

                        Trump’s EPA Plans to Raise Threshold for ‘Safe’ Formaldehyde Exposure

                        Trump’s EPA Plans to Raise Threshold for ‘Safe’ Formaldehyde Exposure

                        A New Meta Quest Probably Won’t Happen in 2026

                        A New Meta Quest Probably Won’t Happen in 2026

                        And the winner of the Microsoft Christmas sweater is…

                        And the winner of the Microsoft Christmas sweater is…

                        Death to one-time text codes: Passkeys are the new hotness in MFA

                        Death to one-time text codes: Passkeys are the new hotness in MFA

                        Trending Tags

                        • Real Estate
                          Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

                          Malaysia Plans To Open Worldwide Tourism On December 1

                          #1 UK housing: renting has turn out to be less expensive than shopping

                          #1 UK housing: renting has turn out to be less expensive than shopping

                          UK assets marketplace pastime maintains at record-breaking levels

                          UK assets marketplace pastime maintains at record-breaking levels

                          GUUD Launches New RYTE Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible for All Businesses

                          GUUD Launches New RYTE Financing Platform To Make Trade Finance Accessible for All Businesses

                          Climate Finance Partnership Raises US$250 Million at First Close to Invest in Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

                          Climate Finance Partnership Raises US$250 Million at First Close to Invest in Emerging Market Climate Infrastructure

                          Interior Jennifer Lopez’s luxe Miami rental: 5 stress-free details in regards to the mansion

                          Interior Jennifer Lopez’s luxe Miami rental: 5 stress-free details in regards to the mansion

                          Trending Tags

                          No Result
                          View All Result
                          TrivDaily
                          No Result
                          View All Result
                          Home Technology

                          Make Windows 11 more useful and less annoying with these 11 Registry hacks

                          Ferhan Rana by Ferhan Rana
                          September 21, 2025
                          in Technology
                          Reading Time:13 mins read
                          30.8k 953
                          A A
                          0
                          Make Windows 11 more useful and less annoying with these 11 Registry hacks
                          29.7k
                          SHARES
                          33.8k
                          VIEWS
                          Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
                          ">

                          hands on Windows 11 has a number of puzzling or annoying UI changes from Windows 10 that power users might wish to change. But you can’t make these tweaks from the Settings menu or even the legacy Control Panel. To make these changes, you’ll need to edit the Registry.

                          For those unfamiliar, the Windows Registry is a set of folders and values that configure certain core functionality of the OS. You can edit and add to it using a built-in tool called Registry Editor (aka Regedit), but be careful, because if you delete or change the wrong entries, you can mess up your entire computer. We should note that these tweaks are for power users who have full admin control over their own personal computers. By and large, if you’re using a managed Windows machine, IT will have locked you out of editing the Registry (for good reason – imagine all the helpdesk calls).

                          Below, we’ll show you 11 different hacks that will massively improve your Windows 11 experience, but require Registry tweaks to work. These range from bringing back the full Windows 10 context menu to eliminating the time-wasting lock screen and everything in between.

                          Editing the Registry

                          To get to the Registry Editor, search for regedit in Windows Search and then click the top result.

                          Registry Editor

                          Registry Editor – Click to enlarge

                          You may want to back up your PC before you edit the Registry, because if you do something really bad, you could adversely affect the performance or stability of Windows.

                          When you’re done editing the Registry, always close the Registry Editor to save. Then restart your computer to see the result of the changes you made.

                          1. Bring back the full right click context menu

                          By default, Windows 11 hides all of the available options from its right-click menus. If you want to see each one of them, you need to click “Show more options.” Some options, such as “Print” and “Create shortcut,” are always missing, and links to open a file in a particular program are at the bottom rather than the top of the list of options.

                          Below, you can see the default context menu you get when right-clicking an image file on the left versus the Windows 10-style complete context menu on the right. The options will vary based on what you right click on and what you have installed, but you always get a more complete list with the full context menu.

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right)

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right) – Click to enlarge

                          To switch to full context menus, first open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID.

                          Registry key - HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID

                          Registry key – HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a new Registry key (aka a folder) called {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} underneath CLSID. You do that by right clicking on CLSID and selecting New->Key. Then you rename the folder it creates to {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2}.

                          Create registry key

                          Create registry key – Click to enlarge

                          Create another new key under {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} and call it InprocServer32. Then open the default value in InprocServer32, set it to blank, and click Ok.

                          Create new key called InprocServer32

                          Create a new key called InprocServer32 – Click to enlarge

                          As always with Registry changes, you’ll need to close the Registry and then restart your computer (or log in / log out) to see the changes.

                          2. Shut down even when apps don’t want you to

                          We’ve all been there. You go to shut down or restart your computer and you get an error message like the one below. One or more of your apps claim to have unsaved content and therefore it won’t close and won’t allow Windows to power down.

                          Shutdown delay

                          Shutdown delay – Click to enlarge

                          Sometimes the apps that prevent a shutdown don’t even have unsaved content in them. In the example above, File Explorer itself was among those holding up the train. Or perhaps you didn’t really want to save that image you already copied and pasted out of Photoshop and onto Facebook, but the image editor is still blocking shutdown.

                          Fortunately, with a simple Registry change, you can tell Windows to force-close apps that prevent it from shutting down.

                          First, in Registry Editor, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop.

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a string value called AutoEndTasks if one with that name doesn’t already exist. You can create a string value by right clicking in the right pane and selecting New->String Value. Then rename it to AutoEndTasks.

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks – Click to enlarge

                          Then set AutoEndTasks to 1. You do that by double clicking on AutoEndTasks and entering 1 in the dialog box that appears.

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Add another string value called WaitToKillAppTimeout (if it doesn’t exist) and set it to 2000. This controls how many milliseconds Windows waits before killing an open app. Then add HungAppTimeout and set it to 2000.

                          Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControl and set the WaitToKillServiceTimeout string value to 2000. Finally, close Regedit and reboot.

                          3. Hide web results from Windows Search

                          Windows 11’s built-in search box is more useful than its Start menu. Often, when I want to launch an app such as Photoshop, I’ll just start typing the first few letters of the name into the box and my desired shortcut will pop up almost immediately.

                          Unfortunately, by default, Windows search also queries Bing for web results. For example, when I asked it to find “cats,” it showed me a bunch of search results about the animals above, where it showed me a JPG file on my computer named cats.jpg. It also made me wait a few seconds so it could download that information from the web.

                          Bing results in Windows Search

                          Bing results in Windows Search – Click to enlarge

                          You can stop Microsoft from pinging the internet when you just want to find what’s on your computer. To do so, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindows. Then create a new key underneath that folder called Explorer and navigate to it.

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer – Click to enlarge

                          Within Explorer, create a DWORD (32-bit) value by right clicking and selecting New->DWORD (32-bit) Value.

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value – Click to enlarge

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit, restart Windows, and you’ll no longer be seeing Bing slop mixed in with files and apps from your own C drive.

                          4. Disable the pointless lock screen

                          Microsoft’s click-wasting lock screen was clearly created with the corrupt influence of big orthopedics, as it’s designed to induce more expensive cases of carpal tunnel syndrome. By default, each time you boot or wake up your PC, you’re presented with a screen that shows the time and, if you haven’t turned them off, promotional messages that encourage you to do things like play Candy Crush.

                          You then have to click before being asked to enter your password or PIN. Why bother? Using the Registry, you can disable the lock screen and have the password box be the first thing you see.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows and then create a key called Personalization under it (if it doesn’t already exist). In the Personalization key, add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          5. Get rid of the Settings home screen

                          Windows Settings used to drop you directly into the System tab, where there are important sub-menus for Display, Sound, Notifications, Power, and more. However, in recent builds, it takes you to this showy and unnecessary home screen and then makes you navigate from there.

                          Settings home screen

                          Settings home screen – Click to enlarge

                          If you want clicking on Settings to take you directly to the system tab, you can modify the Registry to make it so.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesExplorer. Then create a string value called SettingsPageVisibility. Open that value and set it to hide:home.

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home – Click to enlarge

                          Once you’ve rebooted your computer, opening Settings will take you straight to the System tab.

                          6. Turn on verbose mode

                          When you go to start, shut down, or restart Windows, you don’t get a ton of detail showing you what’s going on. However, there’s a Registry tweak called verbose mode that shows you exactly what your PC is doing during these processes.

                          This can be useful, because if your computer stalls while it’s doing something like opening the local session manager or shutting down the Update Orchestrator service, then you know what to fix. It’s also just a lot more fun to watch.

                          Verbose mode in action

                          Verbose mode in action – Click to enlarge

                          To enable Verbose Mode, start by navigating to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called verbosestatus. Open that DWORD and set it to 1.

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          7. Set menu delay to 0

                          By default, Windows 11 waits 400 milliseconds to show expanded menus like the ones you get when you right click and select the New menu (in new or classic context menu). But why wait? That’s 400 milliseconds you’ll never have again!

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option – Click to enlarge

                          You can use a registry setting to lower this delay to 0 milliseconds and have the flyout menus appear any time you scroll past an expandable menu item.

                          To change your menu delay, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop. Then open MenuShowDelay and set it to 0. If you want some delay, you can set it to 100, 200, or 300 milliseconds.

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          8. Add seconds to system clock

                          If you like to know exactly what time it is – right down to the second – you can set the system clock to show seconds in addition to hours and minutes.

                          Seconds in system clock

                          Seconds in system clock – Click to enlarge

                          To add seconds to your system clock, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called ShowSecondsInSystemClock and set that value to 1. You can set it to 0 later if you get sick of seeing the seconds tick away while you’re trying to work.

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and restart. Now, the next time you’re watching the clock at the end of the day, you’ll know whether you have 50 seconds or 25 seconds until 5 pm.

                          9. Add your favorite program to the right-click menu

                          If you have a program that you use a lot, you can add it to the context menu that appears when you right click on the desktop. To make the most of this, we assume that you’ve already enabled the full context menu as shown above in the first hack.

                          First, take note of the path to the executable for the program you want to create a shortcut for. In my case, I’m going to use Notepad++, which installs to C:Program FilesNotepad++notepad++.exe.

                          Then open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell. Create a key under the shell folder with the name of the app (in my case, “Notepad++”). Enter that folder.

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell – Click to enlarge

                          Create a string value in the folder and name it Icon with a capital I. Enter the full file path to your executable as the value with quotes around it.

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program – Click to enlarge

                          Create another Registry key (aka folder) underneath this one (e.g., Notepad++) and name it Command with a capital C. Open the (Default) value in this folder and set it to the executable file path (again with quotes around it).

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and reboot. The new app is now on your classic context menu.

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu – Click to enlarge

                          If you want your icon to appear at the top of the list (above View), create a string value named Position in the same folder as the Icon value and give it a value of Top. Then your icon will be above all others.

                          Program icon on top of the context menu

                          Program icon on top of the context menu – Click to enlarge

                          • Microsoft keeps adding stuff into Windows we don’t want – here’s what we actually need
                          • Microsoft readies Windows 11 25H2 while Windows 10 circles the drain
                          • Nano11 cuts Windows 11 down to size, grabbing just 2.8 GB of disk space
                          • How to get rid of useless keys in Windows and turn them into something helpful

                          10. Click once on taskbar to get last active window

                          It happens all the time. You have multiple windows from the same application open – most often from a browser – and to get to a particular one, you need to hover over the taskbar icon and then choose the thumbnail you want.

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows – Click to enlarge

                          But, with a simple Registry tweak, you can fix Windows 11 so that clicking on the program’s taskbar icon immediately takes you to the most recently active window from that application. If the browser window with theregister.com was the last one you were looking at, then clicking the browser’s icon should make that the active window.

                          To enable this feature, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in the Registry. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value there called LastActiveClick. Finally, set that value to 1.

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          When you reboot your computer, clicking a taskbar icon will take you to the last window you were using from that app.

                          11. Have startup apps launch more quickly

                          If you have apps that you’ve set to start when Windows starts, you will notice that it may take a while after the desktop appears before they start opening. In fact, on a Windows install I just tested, it took around a minute after the desktop had loaded before my startup apps appeared.

                          However, with a simple Registry tweak, you can tell Windows to start opening apps right away. Granted, if your computer is slow, you may want to leave the default delay in place to give your PC time to reach a comfortable idle state before it starts launching programs. But if you have a reasonably modern computer, you’ll benefit a lot from making this change.

                          To get rid of the startup delay, first navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer in Regedit. Then create a new key underneath that one and call it Serialize.

                          In Serialize, create two DWORD (32-bit) values: StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState. Set both of those to 0.

                          Set StartupDelayinMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0

                          Set StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          Now your startup apps should start launching as soon as you can see the desktop. ®

                          ">

                          hands on Windows 11 has a number of puzzling or annoying UI changes from Windows 10 that power users might wish to change. But you can’t make these tweaks from the Settings menu or even the legacy Control Panel. To make these changes, you’ll need to edit the Registry.

                          For those unfamiliar, the Windows Registry is a set of folders and values that configure certain core functionality of the OS. You can edit and add to it using a built-in tool called Registry Editor (aka Regedit), but be careful, because if you delete or change the wrong entries, you can mess up your entire computer. We should note that these tweaks are for power users who have full admin control over their own personal computers. By and large, if you’re using a managed Windows machine, IT will have locked you out of editing the Registry (for good reason – imagine all the helpdesk calls).

                          Below, we’ll show you 11 different hacks that will massively improve your Windows 11 experience, but require Registry tweaks to work. These range from bringing back the full Windows 10 context menu to eliminating the time-wasting lock screen and everything in between.

                          Editing the Registry

                          To get to the Registry Editor, search for regedit in Windows Search and then click the top result.

                          Registry Editor

                          Registry Editor – Click to enlarge

                          You may want to back up your PC before you edit the Registry, because if you do something really bad, you could adversely affect the performance or stability of Windows.

                          When you’re done editing the Registry, always close the Registry Editor to save. Then restart your computer to see the result of the changes you made.

                          1. Bring back the full right click context menu

                          By default, Windows 11 hides all of the available options from its right-click menus. If you want to see each one of them, you need to click “Show more options.” Some options, such as “Print” and “Create shortcut,” are always missing, and links to open a file in a particular program are at the bottom rather than the top of the list of options.

                          Below, you can see the default context menu you get when right-clicking an image file on the left versus the Windows 10-style complete context menu on the right. The options will vary based on what you right click on and what you have installed, but you always get a more complete list with the full context menu.

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right)

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right) – Click to enlarge

                          To switch to full context menus, first open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID.

                          Registry key - HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID

                          Registry key – HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a new Registry key (aka a folder) called {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} underneath CLSID. You do that by right clicking on CLSID and selecting New->Key. Then you rename the folder it creates to {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2}.

                          Create registry key

                          Create registry key – Click to enlarge

                          Create another new key under {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} and call it InprocServer32. Then open the default value in InprocServer32, set it to blank, and click Ok.

                          Create new key called InprocServer32

                          Create a new key called InprocServer32 – Click to enlarge

                          As always with Registry changes, you’ll need to close the Registry and then restart your computer (or log in / log out) to see the changes.

                          2. Shut down even when apps don’t want you to

                          We’ve all been there. You go to shut down or restart your computer and you get an error message like the one below. One or more of your apps claim to have unsaved content and therefore it won’t close and won’t allow Windows to power down.

                          Shutdown delay

                          Shutdown delay – Click to enlarge

                          Sometimes the apps that prevent a shutdown don’t even have unsaved content in them. In the example above, File Explorer itself was among those holding up the train. Or perhaps you didn’t really want to save that image you already copied and pasted out of Photoshop and onto Facebook, but the image editor is still blocking shutdown.

                          Fortunately, with a simple Registry change, you can tell Windows to force-close apps that prevent it from shutting down.

                          First, in Registry Editor, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop.

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a string value called AutoEndTasks if one with that name doesn’t already exist. You can create a string value by right clicking in the right pane and selecting New->String Value. Then rename it to AutoEndTasks.

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks – Click to enlarge

                          Then set AutoEndTasks to 1. You do that by double clicking on AutoEndTasks and entering 1 in the dialog box that appears.

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Add another string value called WaitToKillAppTimeout (if it doesn’t exist) and set it to 2000. This controls how many milliseconds Windows waits before killing an open app. Then add HungAppTimeout and set it to 2000.

                          Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControl and set the WaitToKillServiceTimeout string value to 2000. Finally, close Regedit and reboot.

                          3. Hide web results from Windows Search

                          Windows 11’s built-in search box is more useful than its Start menu. Often, when I want to launch an app such as Photoshop, I’ll just start typing the first few letters of the name into the box and my desired shortcut will pop up almost immediately.

                          Unfortunately, by default, Windows search also queries Bing for web results. For example, when I asked it to find “cats,” it showed me a bunch of search results about the animals above, where it showed me a JPG file on my computer named cats.jpg. It also made me wait a few seconds so it could download that information from the web.

                          Bing results in Windows Search

                          Bing results in Windows Search – Click to enlarge

                          You can stop Microsoft from pinging the internet when you just want to find what’s on your computer. To do so, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindows. Then create a new key underneath that folder called Explorer and navigate to it.

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer – Click to enlarge

                          Within Explorer, create a DWORD (32-bit) value by right clicking and selecting New->DWORD (32-bit) Value.

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value – Click to enlarge

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit, restart Windows, and you’ll no longer be seeing Bing slop mixed in with files and apps from your own C drive.

                          4. Disable the pointless lock screen

                          Microsoft’s click-wasting lock screen was clearly created with the corrupt influence of big orthopedics, as it’s designed to induce more expensive cases of carpal tunnel syndrome. By default, each time you boot or wake up your PC, you’re presented with a screen that shows the time and, if you haven’t turned them off, promotional messages that encourage you to do things like play Candy Crush.

                          You then have to click before being asked to enter your password or PIN. Why bother? Using the Registry, you can disable the lock screen and have the password box be the first thing you see.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows and then create a key called Personalization under it (if it doesn’t already exist). In the Personalization key, add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          5. Get rid of the Settings home screen

                          Windows Settings used to drop you directly into the System tab, where there are important sub-menus for Display, Sound, Notifications, Power, and more. However, in recent builds, it takes you to this showy and unnecessary home screen and then makes you navigate from there.

                          Settings home screen

                          Settings home screen – Click to enlarge

                          If you want clicking on Settings to take you directly to the system tab, you can modify the Registry to make it so.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesExplorer. Then create a string value called SettingsPageVisibility. Open that value and set it to hide:home.

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home – Click to enlarge

                          Once you’ve rebooted your computer, opening Settings will take you straight to the System tab.

                          6. Turn on verbose mode

                          When you go to start, shut down, or restart Windows, you don’t get a ton of detail showing you what’s going on. However, there’s a Registry tweak called verbose mode that shows you exactly what your PC is doing during these processes.

                          This can be useful, because if your computer stalls while it’s doing something like opening the local session manager or shutting down the Update Orchestrator service, then you know what to fix. It’s also just a lot more fun to watch.

                          Verbose mode in action

                          Verbose mode in action – Click to enlarge

                          To enable Verbose Mode, start by navigating to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called verbosestatus. Open that DWORD and set it to 1.

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          7. Set menu delay to 0

                          By default, Windows 11 waits 400 milliseconds to show expanded menus like the ones you get when you right click and select the New menu (in new or classic context menu). But why wait? That’s 400 milliseconds you’ll never have again!

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option – Click to enlarge

                          You can use a registry setting to lower this delay to 0 milliseconds and have the flyout menus appear any time you scroll past an expandable menu item.

                          To change your menu delay, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop. Then open MenuShowDelay and set it to 0. If you want some delay, you can set it to 100, 200, or 300 milliseconds.

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          8. Add seconds to system clock

                          If you like to know exactly what time it is – right down to the second – you can set the system clock to show seconds in addition to hours and minutes.

                          Seconds in system clock

                          Seconds in system clock – Click to enlarge

                          To add seconds to your system clock, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called ShowSecondsInSystemClock and set that value to 1. You can set it to 0 later if you get sick of seeing the seconds tick away while you’re trying to work.

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and restart. Now, the next time you’re watching the clock at the end of the day, you’ll know whether you have 50 seconds or 25 seconds until 5 pm.

                          9. Add your favorite program to the right-click menu

                          If you have a program that you use a lot, you can add it to the context menu that appears when you right click on the desktop. To make the most of this, we assume that you’ve already enabled the full context menu as shown above in the first hack.

                          First, take note of the path to the executable for the program you want to create a shortcut for. In my case, I’m going to use Notepad++, which installs to C:Program FilesNotepad++notepad++.exe.

                          Then open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell. Create a key under the shell folder with the name of the app (in my case, “Notepad++”). Enter that folder.

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell – Click to enlarge

                          Create a string value in the folder and name it Icon with a capital I. Enter the full file path to your executable as the value with quotes around it.

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program – Click to enlarge

                          Create another Registry key (aka folder) underneath this one (e.g., Notepad++) and name it Command with a capital C. Open the (Default) value in this folder and set it to the executable file path (again with quotes around it).

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and reboot. The new app is now on your classic context menu.

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu – Click to enlarge

                          If you want your icon to appear at the top of the list (above View), create a string value named Position in the same folder as the Icon value and give it a value of Top. Then your icon will be above all others.

                          Program icon on top of the context menu

                          Program icon on top of the context menu – Click to enlarge

                          • Microsoft keeps adding stuff into Windows we don’t want – here’s what we actually need
                          • Microsoft readies Windows 11 25H2 while Windows 10 circles the drain
                          • Nano11 cuts Windows 11 down to size, grabbing just 2.8 GB of disk space
                          • How to get rid of useless keys in Windows and turn them into something helpful

                          10. Click once on taskbar to get last active window

                          It happens all the time. You have multiple windows from the same application open – most often from a browser – and to get to a particular one, you need to hover over the taskbar icon and then choose the thumbnail you want.

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows – Click to enlarge

                          But, with a simple Registry tweak, you can fix Windows 11 so that clicking on the program’s taskbar icon immediately takes you to the most recently active window from that application. If the browser window with theregister.com was the last one you were looking at, then clicking the browser’s icon should make that the active window.

                          To enable this feature, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in the Registry. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value there called LastActiveClick. Finally, set that value to 1.

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          When you reboot your computer, clicking a taskbar icon will take you to the last window you were using from that app.

                          11. Have startup apps launch more quickly

                          If you have apps that you’ve set to start when Windows starts, you will notice that it may take a while after the desktop appears before they start opening. In fact, on a Windows install I just tested, it took around a minute after the desktop had loaded before my startup apps appeared.

                          However, with a simple Registry tweak, you can tell Windows to start opening apps right away. Granted, if your computer is slow, you may want to leave the default delay in place to give your PC time to reach a comfortable idle state before it starts launching programs. But if you have a reasonably modern computer, you’ll benefit a lot from making this change.

                          To get rid of the startup delay, first navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer in Regedit. Then create a new key underneath that one and call it Serialize.

                          In Serialize, create two DWORD (32-bit) values: StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState. Set both of those to 0.

                          Set StartupDelayinMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0

                          Set StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          Now your startup apps should start launching as soon as you can see the desktop. ®

                          ">

                          hands on Windows 11 has a number of puzzling or annoying UI changes from Windows 10 that power users might wish to change. But you can’t make these tweaks from the Settings menu or even the legacy Control Panel. To make these changes, you’ll need to edit the Registry.

                          For those unfamiliar, the Windows Registry is a set of folders and values that configure certain core functionality of the OS. You can edit and add to it using a built-in tool called Registry Editor (aka Regedit), but be careful, because if you delete or change the wrong entries, you can mess up your entire computer. We should note that these tweaks are for power users who have full admin control over their own personal computers. By and large, if you’re using a managed Windows machine, IT will have locked you out of editing the Registry (for good reason – imagine all the helpdesk calls).

                          Below, we’ll show you 11 different hacks that will massively improve your Windows 11 experience, but require Registry tweaks to work. These range from bringing back the full Windows 10 context menu to eliminating the time-wasting lock screen and everything in between.

                          Editing the Registry

                          To get to the Registry Editor, search for regedit in Windows Search and then click the top result.

                          Registry Editor

                          Registry Editor – Click to enlarge

                          You may want to back up your PC before you edit the Registry, because if you do something really bad, you could adversely affect the performance or stability of Windows.

                          When you’re done editing the Registry, always close the Registry Editor to save. Then restart your computer to see the result of the changes you made.

                          1. Bring back the full right click context menu

                          By default, Windows 11 hides all of the available options from its right-click menus. If you want to see each one of them, you need to click “Show more options.” Some options, such as “Print” and “Create shortcut,” are always missing, and links to open a file in a particular program are at the bottom rather than the top of the list of options.

                          Below, you can see the default context menu you get when right-clicking an image file on the left versus the Windows 10-style complete context menu on the right. The options will vary based on what you right click on and what you have installed, but you always get a more complete list with the full context menu.

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right)

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right) – Click to enlarge

                          To switch to full context menus, first open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID.

                          Registry key - HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID

                          Registry key – HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a new Registry key (aka a folder) called {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} underneath CLSID. You do that by right clicking on CLSID and selecting New->Key. Then you rename the folder it creates to {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2}.

                          Create registry key

                          Create registry key – Click to enlarge

                          Create another new key under {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} and call it InprocServer32. Then open the default value in InprocServer32, set it to blank, and click Ok.

                          Create new key called InprocServer32

                          Create a new key called InprocServer32 – Click to enlarge

                          As always with Registry changes, you’ll need to close the Registry and then restart your computer (or log in / log out) to see the changes.

                          2. Shut down even when apps don’t want you to

                          We’ve all been there. You go to shut down or restart your computer and you get an error message like the one below. One or more of your apps claim to have unsaved content and therefore it won’t close and won’t allow Windows to power down.

                          Shutdown delay

                          Shutdown delay – Click to enlarge

                          Sometimes the apps that prevent a shutdown don’t even have unsaved content in them. In the example above, File Explorer itself was among those holding up the train. Or perhaps you didn’t really want to save that image you already copied and pasted out of Photoshop and onto Facebook, but the image editor is still blocking shutdown.

                          Fortunately, with a simple Registry change, you can tell Windows to force-close apps that prevent it from shutting down.

                          First, in Registry Editor, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop.

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a string value called AutoEndTasks if one with that name doesn’t already exist. You can create a string value by right clicking in the right pane and selecting New->String Value. Then rename it to AutoEndTasks.

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks – Click to enlarge

                          Then set AutoEndTasks to 1. You do that by double clicking on AutoEndTasks and entering 1 in the dialog box that appears.

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Add another string value called WaitToKillAppTimeout (if it doesn’t exist) and set it to 2000. This controls how many milliseconds Windows waits before killing an open app. Then add HungAppTimeout and set it to 2000.

                          Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControl and set the WaitToKillServiceTimeout string value to 2000. Finally, close Regedit and reboot.

                          3. Hide web results from Windows Search

                          Windows 11’s built-in search box is more useful than its Start menu. Often, when I want to launch an app such as Photoshop, I’ll just start typing the first few letters of the name into the box and my desired shortcut will pop up almost immediately.

                          Unfortunately, by default, Windows search also queries Bing for web results. For example, when I asked it to find “cats,” it showed me a bunch of search results about the animals above, where it showed me a JPG file on my computer named cats.jpg. It also made me wait a few seconds so it could download that information from the web.

                          Bing results in Windows Search

                          Bing results in Windows Search – Click to enlarge

                          You can stop Microsoft from pinging the internet when you just want to find what’s on your computer. To do so, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindows. Then create a new key underneath that folder called Explorer and navigate to it.

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer – Click to enlarge

                          Within Explorer, create a DWORD (32-bit) value by right clicking and selecting New->DWORD (32-bit) Value.

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value – Click to enlarge

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit, restart Windows, and you’ll no longer be seeing Bing slop mixed in with files and apps from your own C drive.

                          4. Disable the pointless lock screen

                          Microsoft’s click-wasting lock screen was clearly created with the corrupt influence of big orthopedics, as it’s designed to induce more expensive cases of carpal tunnel syndrome. By default, each time you boot or wake up your PC, you’re presented with a screen that shows the time and, if you haven’t turned them off, promotional messages that encourage you to do things like play Candy Crush.

                          You then have to click before being asked to enter your password or PIN. Why bother? Using the Registry, you can disable the lock screen and have the password box be the first thing you see.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows and then create a key called Personalization under it (if it doesn’t already exist). In the Personalization key, add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          5. Get rid of the Settings home screen

                          Windows Settings used to drop you directly into the System tab, where there are important sub-menus for Display, Sound, Notifications, Power, and more. However, in recent builds, it takes you to this showy and unnecessary home screen and then makes you navigate from there.

                          Settings home screen

                          Settings home screen – Click to enlarge

                          If you want clicking on Settings to take you directly to the system tab, you can modify the Registry to make it so.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesExplorer. Then create a string value called SettingsPageVisibility. Open that value and set it to hide:home.

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home – Click to enlarge

                          Once you’ve rebooted your computer, opening Settings will take you straight to the System tab.

                          6. Turn on verbose mode

                          When you go to start, shut down, or restart Windows, you don’t get a ton of detail showing you what’s going on. However, there’s a Registry tweak called verbose mode that shows you exactly what your PC is doing during these processes.

                          This can be useful, because if your computer stalls while it’s doing something like opening the local session manager or shutting down the Update Orchestrator service, then you know what to fix. It’s also just a lot more fun to watch.

                          Verbose mode in action

                          Verbose mode in action – Click to enlarge

                          To enable Verbose Mode, start by navigating to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called verbosestatus. Open that DWORD and set it to 1.

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          7. Set menu delay to 0

                          By default, Windows 11 waits 400 milliseconds to show expanded menus like the ones you get when you right click and select the New menu (in new or classic context menu). But why wait? That’s 400 milliseconds you’ll never have again!

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option – Click to enlarge

                          You can use a registry setting to lower this delay to 0 milliseconds and have the flyout menus appear any time you scroll past an expandable menu item.

                          To change your menu delay, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop. Then open MenuShowDelay and set it to 0. If you want some delay, you can set it to 100, 200, or 300 milliseconds.

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          8. Add seconds to system clock

                          If you like to know exactly what time it is – right down to the second – you can set the system clock to show seconds in addition to hours and minutes.

                          Seconds in system clock

                          Seconds in system clock – Click to enlarge

                          To add seconds to your system clock, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called ShowSecondsInSystemClock and set that value to 1. You can set it to 0 later if you get sick of seeing the seconds tick away while you’re trying to work.

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and restart. Now, the next time you’re watching the clock at the end of the day, you’ll know whether you have 50 seconds or 25 seconds until 5 pm.

                          9. Add your favorite program to the right-click menu

                          If you have a program that you use a lot, you can add it to the context menu that appears when you right click on the desktop. To make the most of this, we assume that you’ve already enabled the full context menu as shown above in the first hack.

                          First, take note of the path to the executable for the program you want to create a shortcut for. In my case, I’m going to use Notepad++, which installs to C:Program FilesNotepad++notepad++.exe.

                          Then open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell. Create a key under the shell folder with the name of the app (in my case, “Notepad++”). Enter that folder.

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell – Click to enlarge

                          Create a string value in the folder and name it Icon with a capital I. Enter the full file path to your executable as the value with quotes around it.

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program – Click to enlarge

                          Create another Registry key (aka folder) underneath this one (e.g., Notepad++) and name it Command with a capital C. Open the (Default) value in this folder and set it to the executable file path (again with quotes around it).

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and reboot. The new app is now on your classic context menu.

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu – Click to enlarge

                          If you want your icon to appear at the top of the list (above View), create a string value named Position in the same folder as the Icon value and give it a value of Top. Then your icon will be above all others.

                          Program icon on top of the context menu

                          Program icon on top of the context menu – Click to enlarge

                          • Microsoft keeps adding stuff into Windows we don’t want – here’s what we actually need
                          • Microsoft readies Windows 11 25H2 while Windows 10 circles the drain
                          • Nano11 cuts Windows 11 down to size, grabbing just 2.8 GB of disk space
                          • How to get rid of useless keys in Windows and turn them into something helpful

                          10. Click once on taskbar to get last active window

                          It happens all the time. You have multiple windows from the same application open – most often from a browser – and to get to a particular one, you need to hover over the taskbar icon and then choose the thumbnail you want.

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows – Click to enlarge

                          But, with a simple Registry tweak, you can fix Windows 11 so that clicking on the program’s taskbar icon immediately takes you to the most recently active window from that application. If the browser window with theregister.com was the last one you were looking at, then clicking the browser’s icon should make that the active window.

                          To enable this feature, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in the Registry. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value there called LastActiveClick. Finally, set that value to 1.

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          When you reboot your computer, clicking a taskbar icon will take you to the last window you were using from that app.

                          11. Have startup apps launch more quickly

                          If you have apps that you’ve set to start when Windows starts, you will notice that it may take a while after the desktop appears before they start opening. In fact, on a Windows install I just tested, it took around a minute after the desktop had loaded before my startup apps appeared.

                          However, with a simple Registry tweak, you can tell Windows to start opening apps right away. Granted, if your computer is slow, you may want to leave the default delay in place to give your PC time to reach a comfortable idle state before it starts launching programs. But if you have a reasonably modern computer, you’ll benefit a lot from making this change.

                          To get rid of the startup delay, first navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer in Regedit. Then create a new key underneath that one and call it Serialize.

                          In Serialize, create two DWORD (32-bit) values: StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState. Set both of those to 0.

                          Set StartupDelayinMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0

                          Set StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          Now your startup apps should start launching as soon as you can see the desktop. ®

                          ">

                          hands on Windows 11 has a number of puzzling or annoying UI changes from Windows 10 that power users might wish to change. But you can’t make these tweaks from the Settings menu or even the legacy Control Panel. To make these changes, you’ll need to edit the Registry.

                          For those unfamiliar, the Windows Registry is a set of folders and values that configure certain core functionality of the OS. You can edit and add to it using a built-in tool called Registry Editor (aka Regedit), but be careful, because if you delete or change the wrong entries, you can mess up your entire computer. We should note that these tweaks are for power users who have full admin control over their own personal computers. By and large, if you’re using a managed Windows machine, IT will have locked you out of editing the Registry (for good reason – imagine all the helpdesk calls).

                          Below, we’ll show you 11 different hacks that will massively improve your Windows 11 experience, but require Registry tweaks to work. These range from bringing back the full Windows 10 context menu to eliminating the time-wasting lock screen and everything in between.

                          Editing the Registry

                          To get to the Registry Editor, search for regedit in Windows Search and then click the top result.

                          Registry Editor

                          Registry Editor – Click to enlarge

                          You may want to back up your PC before you edit the Registry, because if you do something really bad, you could adversely affect the performance or stability of Windows.

                          When you’re done editing the Registry, always close the Registry Editor to save. Then restart your computer to see the result of the changes you made.

                          1. Bring back the full right click context menu

                          By default, Windows 11 hides all of the available options from its right-click menus. If you want to see each one of them, you need to click “Show more options.” Some options, such as “Print” and “Create shortcut,” are always missing, and links to open a file in a particular program are at the bottom rather than the top of the list of options.

                          Below, you can see the default context menu you get when right-clicking an image file on the left versus the Windows 10-style complete context menu on the right. The options will vary based on what you right click on and what you have installed, but you always get a more complete list with the full context menu.

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right)

                          Windows 11 context menu (left) vs full classic menu (right) – Click to enlarge

                          To switch to full context menus, first open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID.

                          Registry key - HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID

                          Registry key – HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareClassesCLSID – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a new Registry key (aka a folder) called {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} underneath CLSID. You do that by right clicking on CLSID and selecting New->Key. Then you rename the folder it creates to {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2}.

                          Create registry key

                          Create registry key – Click to enlarge

                          Create another new key under {86ca1aa0-34aa-4e8b-a509-50c905bae2a2} and call it InprocServer32. Then open the default value in InprocServer32, set it to blank, and click Ok.

                          Create new key called InprocServer32

                          Create a new key called InprocServer32 – Click to enlarge

                          As always with Registry changes, you’ll need to close the Registry and then restart your computer (or log in / log out) to see the changes.

                          2. Shut down even when apps don’t want you to

                          We’ve all been there. You go to shut down or restart your computer and you get an error message like the one below. One or more of your apps claim to have unsaved content and therefore it won’t close and won’t allow Windows to power down.

                          Shutdown delay

                          Shutdown delay – Click to enlarge

                          Sometimes the apps that prevent a shutdown don’t even have unsaved content in them. In the example above, File Explorer itself was among those holding up the train. Or perhaps you didn’t really want to save that image you already copied and pasted out of Photoshop and onto Facebook, but the image editor is still blocking shutdown.

                          Fortunately, with a simple Registry change, you can tell Windows to force-close apps that prevent it from shutting down.

                          First, in Registry Editor, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop.

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop

                          Navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop – Click to enlarge

                          Then create a string value called AutoEndTasks if one with that name doesn’t already exist. You can create a string value by right clicking in the right pane and selecting New->String Value. Then rename it to AutoEndTasks.

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks

                          Create a new String value called AutoEndTasks – Click to enlarge

                          Then set AutoEndTasks to 1. You do that by double clicking on AutoEndTasks and entering 1 in the dialog box that appears.

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1

                          Set AutoEndTasks to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Add another string value called WaitToKillAppTimeout (if it doesn’t exist) and set it to 2000. This controls how many milliseconds Windows waits before killing an open app. Then add HungAppTimeout and set it to 2000.

                          Navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetControl and set the WaitToKillServiceTimeout string value to 2000. Finally, close Regedit and reboot.

                          3. Hide web results from Windows Search

                          Windows 11’s built-in search box is more useful than its Start menu. Often, when I want to launch an app such as Photoshop, I’ll just start typing the first few letters of the name into the box and my desired shortcut will pop up almost immediately.

                          Unfortunately, by default, Windows search also queries Bing for web results. For example, when I asked it to find “cats,” it showed me a bunch of search results about the animals above, where it showed me a JPG file on my computer named cats.jpg. It also made me wait a few seconds so it could download that information from the web.

                          Bing results in Windows Search

                          Bing results in Windows Search – Click to enlarge

                          You can stop Microsoft from pinging the internet when you just want to find what’s on your computer. To do so, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwarePoliciesMicrosoftWindows. Then create a new key underneath that folder called Explorer and navigate to it.

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer

                          Create a new Registry key called Explorer – Click to enlarge

                          Within Explorer, create a DWORD (32-bit) value by right clicking and selecting New->DWORD (32-bit) Value.

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value

                          Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value – Click to enlarge

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1.

                          Rename the value to DisableSearchBoxSuggestions and set it to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit, restart Windows, and you’ll no longer be seeing Bing slop mixed in with files and apps from your own C drive.

                          4. Disable the pointless lock screen

                          Microsoft’s click-wasting lock screen was clearly created with the corrupt influence of big orthopedics, as it’s designed to induce more expensive cases of carpal tunnel syndrome. By default, each time you boot or wake up your PC, you’re presented with a screen that shows the time and, if you haven’t turned them off, promotional messages that encourage you to do things like play Candy Crush.

                          You then have to click before being asked to enter your password or PIN. Why bother? Using the Registry, you can disable the lock screen and have the password box be the first thing you see.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows and then create a key called Personalization under it (if it doesn’t already exist). In the Personalization key, add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1.

                          Add a DWORD (32-bit) value called NoLockScreen and set its value to 1. – Click to enlarge

                          5. Get rid of the Settings home screen

                          Windows Settings used to drop you directly into the System tab, where there are important sub-menus for Display, Sound, Notifications, Power, and more. However, in recent builds, it takes you to this showy and unnecessary home screen and then makes you navigate from there.

                          Settings home screen

                          Settings home screen – Click to enlarge

                          If you want clicking on Settings to take you directly to the system tab, you can modify the Registry to make it so.

                          In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesExplorer. Then create a string value called SettingsPageVisibility. Open that value and set it to hide:home.

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home

                          Set SettingsPageVisibility to hide:home – Click to enlarge

                          Once you’ve rebooted your computer, opening Settings will take you straight to the System tab.

                          6. Turn on verbose mode

                          When you go to start, shut down, or restart Windows, you don’t get a ton of detail showing you what’s going on. However, there’s a Registry tweak called verbose mode that shows you exactly what your PC is doing during these processes.

                          This can be useful, because if your computer stalls while it’s doing something like opening the local session manager or shutting down the Update Orchestrator service, then you know what to fix. It’s also just a lot more fun to watch.

                          Verbose mode in action

                          Verbose mode in action – Click to enlarge

                          To enable Verbose Mode, start by navigating to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionPoliciesSystem in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called verbosestatus. Open that DWORD and set it to 1.

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1

                          Create a DWORD value called verbosestatus and set it to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          7. Set menu delay to 0

                          By default, Windows 11 waits 400 milliseconds to show expanded menus like the ones you get when you right click and select the New menu (in new or classic context menu). But why wait? That’s 400 milliseconds you’ll never have again!

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option

                          Menu shows delay fires when you hover over an expandable menu option – Click to enlarge

                          You can use a registry setting to lower this delay to 0 milliseconds and have the flyout menus appear any time you scroll past an expandable menu item.

                          To change your menu delay, open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop. Then open MenuShowDelay and set it to 0. If you want some delay, you can set it to 100, 200, or 300 milliseconds.

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0

                          Set MenuShowDelay to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          8. Add seconds to system clock

                          If you like to know exactly what time it is – right down to the second – you can set the system clock to show seconds in addition to hours and minutes.

                          Seconds in system clock

                          Seconds in system clock – Click to enlarge

                          To add seconds to your system clock, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in Regedit. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value called ShowSecondsInSystemClock and set that value to 1. You can set it to 0 later if you get sick of seeing the seconds tick away while you’re trying to work.

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1

                          Set ShowSecondsInSystemClock to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and restart. Now, the next time you’re watching the clock at the end of the day, you’ll know whether you have 50 seconds or 25 seconds until 5 pm.

                          9. Add your favorite program to the right-click menu

                          If you have a program that you use a lot, you can add it to the context menu that appears when you right click on the desktop. To make the most of this, we assume that you’ve already enabled the full context menu as shown above in the first hack.

                          First, take note of the path to the executable for the program you want to create a shortcut for. In my case, I’m going to use Notepad++, which installs to C:Program FilesNotepad++notepad++.exe.

                          Then open Regedit and navigate to HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell. Create a key under the shell folder with the name of the app (in my case, “Notepad++”). Enter that folder.

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell

                          Create a Registry key under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTDirectoryBackgroundshell – Click to enlarge

                          Create a string value in the folder and name it Icon with a capital I. Enter the full file path to your executable as the value with quotes around it.

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program

                          Set the string value Icon to the path to your program – Click to enlarge

                          Create another Registry key (aka folder) underneath this one (e.g., Notepad++) and name it Command with a capital C. Open the (Default) value in this folder and set it to the executable file path (again with quotes around it).

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path

                          Create a subkey called Command and set its default value to the application path – Click to enlarge

                          Close Regedit and reboot. The new app is now on your classic context menu.

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu

                          Your program is now on the (classic) context menu – Click to enlarge

                          If you want your icon to appear at the top of the list (above View), create a string value named Position in the same folder as the Icon value and give it a value of Top. Then your icon will be above all others.

                          Program icon on top of the context menu

                          Program icon on top of the context menu – Click to enlarge

                          • Microsoft keeps adding stuff into Windows we don’t want – here’s what we actually need
                          • Microsoft readies Windows 11 25H2 while Windows 10 circles the drain
                          • Nano11 cuts Windows 11 down to size, grabbing just 2.8 GB of disk space
                          • How to get rid of useless keys in Windows and turn them into something helpful

                          10. Click once on taskbar to get last active window

                          It happens all the time. You have multiple windows from the same application open – most often from a browser – and to get to a particular one, you need to hover over the taskbar icon and then choose the thumbnail you want.

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows

                          Hovering over a taskbar icon shows its different windows – Click to enlarge

                          But, with a simple Registry tweak, you can fix Windows 11 so that clicking on the program’s taskbar icon immediately takes you to the most recently active window from that application. If the browser window with theregister.com was the last one you were looking at, then clicking the browser’s icon should make that the active window.

                          To enable this feature, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorerAdvanced in the Registry. Then create a DWORD (32-bit) value there called LastActiveClick. Finally, set that value to 1.

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1

                          Set LastActiveClick to 1 – Click to enlarge

                          When you reboot your computer, clicking a taskbar icon will take you to the last window you were using from that app.

                          11. Have startup apps launch more quickly

                          If you have apps that you’ve set to start when Windows starts, you will notice that it may take a while after the desktop appears before they start opening. In fact, on a Windows install I just tested, it took around a minute after the desktop had loaded before my startup apps appeared.

                          However, with a simple Registry tweak, you can tell Windows to start opening apps right away. Granted, if your computer is slow, you may want to leave the default delay in place to give your PC time to reach a comfortable idle state before it starts launching programs. But if you have a reasonably modern computer, you’ll benefit a lot from making this change.

                          To get rid of the startup delay, first navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer in Regedit. Then create a new key underneath that one and call it Serialize.

                          In Serialize, create two DWORD (32-bit) values: StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState. Set both of those to 0.

                          Set StartupDelayinMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0

                          Set StartupDelayInMSec and WaitForIdleState to 0 – Click to enlarge

                          Now your startup apps should start launching as soon as you can see the desktop. ®

                          Tags: usefulWindows
                          ">
                          Ferhan Rana

                          Ferhan Rana

                          Related Posts

                          Microsoft RasMan DoS 0-day gets unofficial patch
                          Technology

                          Microsoft RasMan DoS 0-day gets unofficial patch

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          December 13, 2025
                          New React vulns leak secrets, invite DoS attacks
                          Technology

                          New React vulns leak secrets, invite DoS attacks

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          December 13, 2025
                          You Have a Week to Claim Up to $7,500 From AT&T Data Breach Settlements
                          Technology

                          You Have a Week to Claim Up to $7,500 From AT&T Data Breach Settlements

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          December 12, 2025
                          JLab Epic Pods ANC Review: A Battery Beast if There Ever Was One
                          Technology

                          JLab Epic Pods ANC Review: A Battery Beast if There Ever Was One

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          December 12, 2025
                          European cloud trade group says EU should have blocked VMware-Broadcom merger
                          Technology

                          European cloud trade group says EU should have blocked VMware-Broadcom merger

                          by Ferhan Rana
                          December 11, 2025

                          Premium Content

                          Princess Theodora and Matthew Kumar look so in love in official wedding photos

                          Princess Theodora and Matthew Kumar look so in love in official wedding photos

                          September 29, 2024
                          World of Warcraft‘s Developers Just Made a Huge Leap Forward For Video Game Unionization

                          World of Warcraft‘s Developers Just Made a Huge Leap Forward For Video Game Unionization

                          July 25, 2024
                          Man United vs. Tottenham odds: Free 2025 UEFA Europa League final picks, prediction for Wednesday, May 21

                          Man United vs. Tottenham odds: Free 2025 UEFA Europa League final picks, prediction for Wednesday, May 21

                          May 21, 2025

                          Browse by Category

                          • Business
                          • Crypto
                          • Entertainment
                          • Fashion
                          • Health
                          • Lifestyle
                          • Real Estate
                          • Sports
                          • Technology
                          • Travel
                          • Uncategorized
                          • World

                          Browse by Tags

                          announces Apple Barcelona Beckham Charles Elizabeth Europe Exclusive family First George Google Harry health Inside Intel James Jennifer Kelly Lewis makes Manchester Markle Meghan Michael Microsoft Middleton people Prince Princess Queen REPORT reveals Review Royal Samsung Shares Taylor Trump Twitter wants WATCH William World Years
                          TrivDaily

                          Get the latest World news and analysis, breaking news, features and special reports from World. Also watch videos from across the Europian continent.

                          Learn more

                          Categories

                          • Business
                          • Crypto
                          • Entertainment
                          • Fashion
                          • Health
                          • Lifestyle
                          • Real Estate
                          • Sports
                          • Technology
                          • Travel
                          • Uncategorized
                          • World

                          Browse by Tag

                          Business (1525) Crypto (1593) Entertainment (1947) Fashion (3) Health (1787) Lifestyle (1850) Real Estate (40) Sports (3000) Technology (2979) Travel (1440) Uncategorized (11) World (23)

                          Recent Posts

                          • Arlington SX Full Race Day and TV Broadcast Schedules
                          • Jordon Smith Set for Season, 450SX Debut at Arlington SX
                          • UK Online Casino: A Modern Guide

                          © 2021 TrivDaily - Developed by ADSA Solutions.

                          Welcome Back!

                          Login to your account below

                          Forgotten Password? Sign Up

                          Create New Account!

                          Fill the forms bellow to register

                          All fields are required. Log In

                          Retrieve your password

                          Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

                          Log In

                          Add New Playlist

                          • Login
                          • Sign Up
                          • Cart
                          No Result
                          View All Result
                          • Home
                          • Business News
                          • Entertainment News
                          • Lifestyle News
                          • Health News
                          • Tech News
                          • Real Estate News
                          • World News

                          © 2021 TrivDaily - Developed by ADSA Solutions.

                          Are you sure want to unlock this post?
                          Unlock left : 0
                          Are you sure want to cancel subscription?