Continuing our series of the top 50 Tips, Tricks, and Secrets to Windows
7.
18. Custom power switch
By default, Windows 7 displays a plain text 'Shut down' button on the
Start menu, but it only takes a moment to change this action to
something else. If you reboot your PC a few times every day then that
might make more sense as a default action: right-click the Start orb,
select Properties and set the 'Power boot action' to 'Restart' to make
it happen.
19. Auto arrange your desktop
If your Windows 7 desktop has icons scattered everywhere then you could
right-click it and select View > Auto arrange, just as in Vista. But a
simpler solution is just to press and hold down F5, and Windows will
automatically arrange its icons for you.
20. Disable smart window arrangement
Windows 7 features interesting new ways to intelligently arrange your
windows, so that (for example) if you drag a window to the top of the
screen then it will maximise. We like the new system, but if you find it
distracting then it's easily disabled. Run REGEDIT, go to
HKEY_CURRENT_USERControl PanelDesktop, set WindowArrangementActive to
0, reboot, and your windows will behave just as they always did.
21. Browse your tasks
If you prefer the keyboard over the mouse, you will love browsing the
taskbar using this nifty shortcut. Press Windows and T, and you move the
focus to the left-most icon on the taskbar. Then use your arrow keys to
change the focus to other icons, and you get a live preview of every
window.
22. Display your drives
Click Computer in Windows 7 and you might see a strange lack of drives,
but don't panic, it's just Microsoft trying to be helpful: drives like
memory card readers are no longer displayed if they're empty. We think
it's an improvement, but if you disagree then it's easy to get your
empty drives back. Launch Explorer, click Tools > Folder Options > View
and clear 'Hide empty drives in the computer folder'.
23. See more detail
The new and improved Windows 7 magnifier offers a much easier way to
zoom in on any area of the screen. Launch it and you can now define a
scale factor and docking position, and once activated it can track your
keyboard focus around the screen. Press Tab as you move around a dialog
box, say, and it'll automatically zoom in on the currently active
control.
24. Hiding the Windows Live Messenger icon
If you use Windows Live Messenger a lot, you'll have noticed that
the icon now resides on the taskbar, where you can easily change status
and quickly send an IM to someone. If you prefer to keep Windows Live
Messenger in the system tray, where it's been for previous releases,
just close Windows Live Messenger, edit the shortcut properties and set
the application to run in Windows Vista compatibility mode.
25. Customise UAC
Windows Vista's User Account Control was a good idea in practice, but
poor implementation put many people off - it raised far too many alerts.
Fortunately Windows 7 displays less warnings by default, and lets you
further fine-tune UAC to suit your preferred balance between security
and a pop-up free life (Start > Control Panel > Change User Account
Control Settings).
26. Use Sticky Notes
The Sticky Notes app is both simpler and more useful in Windows 7.
Launch StikyNot.exe and you can type notes at the keyboard; right-click
a note to change its colour; click the + sign on the note title bar to
add another note; and click a note and press Alt + 4 to close the note
windows (your notes are automatically saved).
27. Open folder in new process
By default Windows 7 opens folders in the same process. This saves
system resources, but means one folder crash can bring down the entire
shell. If your system seems unstable, or you're doing something in
Explorer that regularly seems to causes crashes, then open Computer,
hold down Shift, right-click on your drive and select Open in New
Process. The folder will now be launched in a separate process, and so a
crash is less likely to affect anything else.
28. Watch more videos
Windows Media Player 12 is a powerful program, but it still won't play
all the audio and video files you'll find online. Fortunately the first
freeware Windows 7 codecs package [shark007.net/win7codecs.html] has
been released, and installing it could get your troublesome multimedia
files playing again.
29. Preview fonts
Open the Fonts window in Windows XP and Vista and you'll see the font
names, probably with icons to tell you whether they're TrueType or
OpenType, but that's about it. Windows 7 sees some useful font-related
improvements.
Open the new fonts window and you'll find a little preview for every
font, giving you a quick idea of how they're going to look.
The tedium of scrolling through multiple entries for each family,
like Times New Roman, Times New Roman Bold, Times New Roman Bold Italic
and so on, has finally ended. There's now just a single entry for each
font (though you can still see all other members of the family).
And there's a new OpenType font, Gabriola, added to the mix. It's an
attractive script font, well worth a try the next time you need a
stylish document that stands out from the crowd.
30. Restore your gadgets
Windows 7 has tightened up its security by refusing to run gadgets if
UAC has been turned off, so limiting the damage malicious unsigned
gadgets can do to your system. If you've disabled UAC, miss your gadgets
and are happy to accept the security risk, though, there's an easy
Registry way to get everything back to normal. Run REGEDIT, go to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionSidebarSettings,
create a new DWORD value called AllowElevatedProcess and set it to 1.
Your gadgets should start working again right away.