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10 Windows 11 tips and tricks we use to customize our PCS

We use these Windows 11 tips, and we think you should too.

- BY MARK HACHMAN

The best Windows 11 tips are the ones you use—to make you more efficient and productive, and to customize your PC so it’s exactly how you want it to be.

But to integrate a tip, you have to actually try it out. So that’s what we’d like you to do: Give each of these tips a quick whirl, see if they work for you, and if they do, great! We want to share what helps us and hope that it helps you as well. The list below includes tips for both older features and newer ones. Either way, enjoy!

1. OPTIMIZE YOUR STARTUP APPS

Everyone hits the gym to start off the year. So why not use the time to trim some of the

holiday bloat from your PC? There are potentiall­y dozens of apps that can quietly load during your PC’S startup, adding to the time it takes your PC to boot and gobbling up memory when it’s completed.

Take a look at your startup apps inside the Windows 11 Settings menu (Settings > Apps > Startup) and start considerin­g flipping off apps that you won’t immediatel­y need, especially those that are marked “high impact.” All this will do is force you to load them when you want to use them, which honestly isn’t so bad.

Just don’t turn off a background antivirus process or anything associated with Windows (Edge is fine). If you have any utilities associated with your PC maker (Dell, HP, and so on), it might be best to leave those alone.

2. SET UP YOUR PC FOR MULTIPLE DISPLAYS

Hopefully you use more than one display ( fave.co/3je76hd) with your desktop and/or laptop, and you can buy great monitors on sale right now ( fave.co/3j1idpz). They’re hugely productive, and if you’re worried about desk space, you can go vertical instead ( fave.co/3dda1n5).

With Windows 11, you’ll want to do two things: Arrange your displays within Windows, and make sure you have your “primary” display picked out.

At Settings > System > Display you can arrange your monitors so that your cursor naturally and seamlessly moves from one display to the other. Drag the displays next to one another in whatever arrangemen­t you’d like: if you use one display to the right of another, arrange them side by side in Windows so you can mouse from one to the other. Also pick out which display should be the primary one, where you can click on the volume icon and Notificati­ons.

If you have a laptop, ensure the option to preserve the display layout is checked (“Remember window locations based on monitor connection”), especially if you own a Thunderbol­t dock ( fave.co/3vta0be). That way everything will remain organized the same way whether you undock your laptop or not.

3. UNDERSTAND HOW TO ADJUST THE SIZE OF TEXT AND ICONS

We’re all getting older—and even if your vision is excellent, we’re all still squinting at screens more than we should. In Settings > System > Display, you can adjust the Scale of each display. Making the value larger will increase the size of every element within Windows: icons, text, window sizes, and so forth. But Settings > Accessibil­ity > Text size will simply scale the text size up and down for what you’re reading right now.

Why choose one over the other? Because you may instinctiv­ely know which icon correspond­s to which, whether you wear glasses or not. But adjusting the text size may allow you to avoid paying for bifocals while still using Windows effectivel­y.

4. GET THE WINDOWS 11 TASKBAR THE WAY YOU WANT IT

Windows 11’s taskbar still stinks—though the excellent $4.99 Start11 utility fixes things ( fave.co/3a2jzkj) by allowing you to widen

and move it. But if you don’t want to pay, make sure you’re getting the most out of Windows 11 itself. In Settings > Personaliz­ation > Taskbar you can ensure that the taskbar, including the badges that indicate available mail, is shown or hidden on all of your displays.

You can also choose to hide various Taskbar icons by toggling off apps you’ll never use. (Bye-bye, Chat.)

5. SKIP THE START MENU ENTIRELY

Honestly, the best way to use your Start menu is not to use it; just press the Windows key and type the name of the app ( Win, then

“word” to open Microsoft Word, for example). It’s simply faster than pawing for your mouse and clicking through various submenus to find what you want.

If you want an even faster method, simply type Win plus the number of the icon on the taskbar to launch that program—so opening the first taskbar program would be Win + 1, the second would be Win + 2, and so on. Beware, though, as Microsoft appears to have switched up how it counts the icons. On my PC, the “first” icon is File Explorer, not the Start, Search or virtual desktops icon to its left.

6. OPTIMIZE THE WINDOWS 11 START MENU

How we use the Start menu isn’t necessaril­y how you’ll use the Start menu. The Start menu isn’t that great for searching for apps, but it’s surprising­ly good for picking up where you left off on a specific document.

To configure the Start menu the way you want, go to Settings > Personaliz­ation > Start. Choose the layout you prefer: “more pins” shows more apps, while “more recommenda­tions” shows more recent documents. If you’d like to turn off recent

documents, toggle them off in “Show recently opened items in Start…” below. (Microsoft does an awful job of naming these.) You’ll see your changes reflected in the Start layout the next time you open it.

There’s more that you can do here, such as adding to the icons that are displayed next to the power button (Personaliz­ation > Start > Folders), but they’re not as efficient as using File Explorer.

7. FILE EXPLORER’S NEW TABS ARE THE BEST WAY TO COPY FILES

It’s no fun to use a single File Explorer window to highlight a file, cut or copy it, then navigate through an entire file tree of drives, files, and folders to find the target location. If you’ve installed the Windows 11 2022 Update followed by its supplement­ary October Update, File Explorer is now new and improved with a browser like tab option. Just open the File Explorer window, click the plus-sign (+) button to open another tab, and then transfer files back and forth at your leisure.

8. USE FILE EXPLORER’S PREVIEW PANE

Sometimes file names aren’t really enough to find the file you’re looking for. For that, there are two solutions: File Explorer’s built-in search

is one. The other is the preview pane, which “opens” the file for you to view. This works for text files, images, PDFS—A surprising number of file types, actually. Just make sure the Preview pane is enabled (click on View at the top, then Show, and then Preview pane) and make sure the pane is large enough so you can comfortabl­y view the document in question.

9. TURN ON GAME MODE

Windows 11 Game Mode prevents Windows from updating while you’re playing a game and shuts off background processes to give your PC all the horsepower it can muster. Seems obvious, right? Go to Settings > Gaming > Game Mode to flip it on. It will trigger when you’re playing a game, but it won’t do anything otherwise. Note that it may cause Youtube videos playing in a browser on a second monitor to stutter a bit, however.

10. CARVE OUT SPACE FOR YOU WITH DO NOT DISTURB

Windows’ Focus Mode turns off notificati­ons and can schedule a playlist of Spotify songs to help you burn through a task without external distractio­ns. But if you have multiple monitors open to view email, and if an app icon posts a taskbar badge to alert you…do you really need notificati­ons? In Settings > System > Notificati­ons you can simply turn “Do not disturb” on, which allows notificati­ons to accumulate in the Notificati­ons portion of the Action Center, but you won’t actually be bothered by them.

You can also schedule notificati­ons to be turned off at certain hours with the related control labeled “Turn on do not disturb automatica­lly.” Your personal time should be your own… especially after hours during a vacation.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Arranging your displays is a key part of working with multiple displays.
Arranging your displays is a key part of working with multiple displays.
 ?? ?? You’d be surprised how many apps your PC may be loading at startup. Choose carefully to minimize performanc­e impact.
You’d be surprised how many apps your PC may be loading at startup. Choose carefully to minimize performanc­e impact.
 ?? ?? You can find the control to scale Windows here (red arrow). Experiment to find the right setting.
You can find the control to scale Windows here (red arrow). Experiment to find the right setting.
 ?? ?? Of all the options here, extending your Taskbar to all of your displays (red arrow) and hiding unnecessar­y icons (blue arrow) are probably the most important.
Of all the options here, extending your Taskbar to all of your displays (red arrow) and hiding unnecessar­y icons (blue arrow) are probably the most important.
 ?? ?? Clicking the plus-sign (+) button (next to the red arrow) adds another File Explorer tab. To the right you can see the File Explorer preview pane in action.
Clicking the plus-sign (+) button (next to the red arrow) adds another File Explorer tab. To the right you can see the File Explorer preview pane in action.
 ?? ?? Configure the Start menu as you wish.
Configure the Start menu as you wish.
 ?? ?? Notificati­ons can be handy, but not always. Control them!
Notificati­ons can be handy, but not always. Control them!

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