TechRadar rating 4.5 /5 FOR Scaled down S4 design Bright screen Excellent camera 4G AGAINST Not full...
Windows 8 tips: increase productivity
21. Disable the lock screen
If you like your PC to boot just
as fast as possible then the new Windows 8 lock screen may not appeal.
Don't worry, though, if you'd like to ditch this then it only takes a
moment.
Launch REGEDIT, and browse to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\Personalization
(create the Personalization key if it doesn't exist).
Click
Personalization in the left-hand pane. Right-click in the right-hand
pane, select New > DWORD Value, and give it the name NoLockScreen.
Double-click
your new NoLockScreen value, set it to 1, click OK, and when you next
reboot it the lock screen will have gone. If you decide to restore it
for some reason, set NoLockScreen to 0 or delete it entirely.
22. Install anything
Most
mobile platforms recommend you only install apps from approved sources
to protect your security, and Windows 8 is the same: it'll only allow
you to install trusted (that is, digitally signed) apps from the Windows
store.
If this proves a problem, though, and you're willing to
take the security risk (because this isn't something to try unless
you're entirely sure it's safe), then the system can be configured to
run trusted apps from any source.
It's all done via a single
Registry key, too. Just launch REGEDIT and set the value of the
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\Appx\AllowAllTrustedApps
key to 1.
23. Pin app contents to the Start screen
It's
easy to pin apps to the Start screen (right-click, select "Pin"), but
you don't have to stop there. Many apps also enable you to pin
particular content for easy access later.
If you want more ideas
for your upcoming holiday in Rome, for instance, you could open the
Travel app, right-click, select "Destinations" and choose the "Rome"
tile. And then repeat those steps every single time you revisit the
page. Or, alternatively, right-click your preferred Destination tile,
select "Pin...", and you'll be able to access it directly from the Start
screen.
Similarly, if you use the Mail app with multiple accounts
then just open these, and you can right-click to select separate live
tiles for each one - much more useful.
24. Log in automatically
WARNING: Your account will lose admin privileges as a result of this step
Of
course even if you remove the lock screen, you'll still be forced to
manually log in every time your system starts. This can also be resolved
at speed, though, using much the same technique as in previous versions
of Windows.
Hold down the Windows key, press R, type 'netplwiz' and press Enter to launch the User Accounts dialog.
Clear the "Users must enter a user name and password to use this computer" box and click OK.
Enter
the user name and password of the account that you'd like to be logged
in automatically, click OK, restart your system and this time it should
boot directly to the Start screen.
25. Use six apps at once
Launch
a Windows 8 app and it appears full-screen, which is fine on a small
tablet but not so impressive when you've got a 27-inch widescreen
monitor to fill.
Toolbox for Windows 8 helps out, though, by
bundling 12 common apps in a single package. You get a Facebook client,
browser, calculator, weather app, clock and more. And instead of always
appearing full-screen, you can run and interact with two, three, four,
even six of these tools, all at the same time.
26. Replace the Start menu
If Windows 8's search and navigation tools still leave you pining for the regular Start menu, installing the free Classic Shell will replace it with something very similar.
Install
it and you get the standard menu of your installed programs, for
instance, along with Search and Run boxes, the Recent Items menu, and
Windows 7-type shutdown options. And it can make Windows 8 boot directly
to the desktop, too.
Classic Shell doesn't entirely ignore the
modern UI world, though. A menu of installed apps enables you to launch
them from the desktop, and you can alternatively switch to the Start
screen with a click.
27. Learn Windows key shortcuts
Win : switch between the Start screen and the last-running Windows 8 app
Win + C : displays the Charms: the Settings, Devices, Share and Search options
Win + D : launches the desktop
Win + E : launches Explorer
Win + F : opens the File Search pane
Win + H : opens the Share pane
Win + I : opens Settings
Win + K : opens the Devices pane
Win + L : locks your PC
Win + M : minimises the current Explorer or Internet Explorer window (works in the full-screen IE, too)
Win + O : toggles device orientation lock on and off
Win + P : switch your display to a second display or projector
Win + Q : open the App Search pane
Win + R : opens the Run box
Win + U : open the Ease of Access Centre
Win + V : cycle through toasts (notifications)
Win + W : search your system settings (type POWER for links to all power-related options, say)
Win + X : displays a text menu of useful Windows tools and applets
Win + Z : displays the right-click context menu when in a full-screen app
Win + + : launch Magnifier and zoom in
Win + - : zoom out
Win + , : Aero peek at the desktop
Win + Enter : launch Narrator
Win + PgUp : move the current screen to the left-hand monitor
Win + PgDn : move the current screen to the right-hand monitor
Win + PrtSc : capture the current screen and save it to your Pictures folder
Win + Tab : switch between running apps
28. Boot desktop apps faster
While
you can still set up desktop apps to load when Windows 8 starts, they
don't have the priority they once did. Quite the opposite, in fact -
Windows 8 delays their launch to ensure everything else starts more
quickly. This can make the system more responsive as your system boots,
but if you're switching straight to the desktop then it may slow you
down, so it may be worth turning off the delay, just to see if you can
spot any improvement.
Launch REGEDIT and browse to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Serialize.
Create the Serialize key if it doesn't exist, and select it in the left-hand pane.
Right-click
in the right-hand pane, create a new DWORD value called
StartupDelayInMSec, and leave it set at zero (or, if a value is already
there, set it to zero).
Restart and the desktop apps will now
launch more quickly. Try three or four test boots to see if there's any
improvement, and if not, delete the StartupDelayInMSec value to restore
the default settings.
29. Launch programs fast
What you need to know Windows Phone 8
If
you're a fan of keyboard shortcuts and don't like the idea of scrolling
through app tiles to find the program you need, don't worry, Windows 8
still supports a useful old shortcut. Which is perfect if, say, you're
looking to be able to shut down your PC with a click.
Launch the desktop app, right-click an empty part of the desktop and click New > Shortcut.
Browse to the application you'd like to launch here. Or for the sake of this example, enter shutdown.exe -s -t 00
to shut down your PC, or shutdown.exe -h -t 00
to hibernate it, and click Next. Type a shortcut name - 'Hibernate', say - and click Finish.
Right-click
the shortcut, select Pin to Start and it should appear on the far right
of the Start screen - just drag the tile wherever you like.
30. Take intelligent screengrabs
If
a Windows 8 application is showing something interesting and you'd like
to record it for posterity, then hold down the Windows key, press
PrtSc, and the image won't just go to the clipboard: it'll also be
automatically saved to your My Pictures folder with the name
Screenshot.png (and then Screenshot(1).png, Screenshot(2).png and so
on).
You might hope that pressing Win+Alt+PrtSc would similarly
save an image of the active window, but no, sadly not. Maybe next time.
31. Default to Photo Viewer
Double-click
an image file within Explorer and it won't open in a Photo Viewer
window any more, at least not by default. Instead you'll be switched to
the full-screen Windows 8 Photos app - bad news if you thought you'd
escaped such hassles by using the desktop.
If you'd like to fix this, go to Control Panel > Programs > Default Programs and select Set your default programs.
Scroll down and click Windows Photo Viewer in the Programs list.
Finally,
click 'Set this program as default' if you'd like the Viewer to open
all the file types it can handle, or select the 'Choose default' options
if you prefer to specify which file types it should open. Click OK when
you're done.