Difference between revisions of "Windows 10 tricks"

From TheAlmightyGuru
Jump to: navigation, search
(Installation Requires Microsoft Account)
(Bad UI)
Line 6: Line 6:
 
The user interface of Windows 10 is one of the worst Microsoft has ever made, for several reasons:
 
The user interface of Windows 10 is one of the worst Microsoft has ever made, for several reasons:
 
* Title bars are no longer standard across forms and many programs abandon the default layout. For example, in an attempt to look "clean," the designers removed the visual cues on the title bar section from many of their forms (like the Taskbar settings form). They are now the same color as the background of the form making it much harder to know when you're clicking on the form or the title bar. This causes the user to frequently miss when trying to drag a form by its title bar or double-click it to min/max it. Also, by not having a visible title bar, it's impossible to know at a glance which form has focus.
 
* Title bars are no longer standard across forms and many programs abandon the default layout. For example, in an attempt to look "clean," the designers removed the visual cues on the title bar section from many of their forms (like the Taskbar settings form). They are now the same color as the background of the form making it much harder to know when you're clicking on the form or the title bar. This causes the user to frequently miss when trying to drag a form by its title bar or double-click it to min/max it. Also, by not having a visible title bar, it's impossible to know at a glance which form has focus.
* All of the default form controls, which previously used a visually functional 3D style, have been replaced with flat controls like way back on Windows 3. Also, nearly every for control is now the same color as the form, including toolbars, side bars, scroll bars, status bars, text boxes, lists, grids, grid headers, etc. Some of them at least have a bounding box, but many of them are now impossible to visually demarcate. This causes a lot of missed-clicks because you can't know which control you're hovering over. This is especially bad when multiple controls that can accept clicks are right next to each other. For example, if you intend to click the first record in a grid, but accidentally click the header by mistake because it's so hard to tell where one begins and the other ends, not only will you not highlight the record you want, but, by clicking the header, you will completely resort the grid, pushing the record you wanted off the display.
+
* All of the default form controls, which previously used a visually functional 3D style, have been replaced with flat controls like way back on Windows 3. Also, nearly every control is now the same color as the form, including toolbars, side bars, scroll bars, status bars, text boxes, lists, grids, grid headers, etc. Some of them at least have a bounding box, but many of them are now impossible to visually demarcate. This causes a lot of missed-clicks because you can't know which control you're hovering over. This is especially bad when multiple controls that can accept clicks are right next to each other. For example, if you intend to click the first record in a grid, but accidentally click the header by mistake because it's so hard to tell where one begins and the other ends, not only will you not highlight the record you want, but, by clicking the header, you will completely resort the grid, pushing the record you wanted off the display.
 
* Several forms now hide the scrollbar almost entirely (it's only two pixels wide and right near the border). To make it visible, you have hover your mouse over a narrow range on the right edge of the form for about a second to make it visible, but it will hide itself again after you move your cursor away from it. This makes it easy to miss any data beyond what is currently visible because, without a scrollbar, it appears as though there is nothing left to see.
 
* Several forms now hide the scrollbar almost entirely (it's only two pixels wide and right near the border). To make it visible, you have hover your mouse over a narrow range on the right edge of the form for about a second to make it visible, but it will hide itself again after you move your cursor away from it. This makes it easy to miss any data beyond what is currently visible because, without a scrollbar, it appears as though there is nothing left to see.
* The border around forms has been decreased to a single pixel. This makes reading text near the edges of overlapping forms more difficult. Overlap a couple Command Windows or File Explorers and you'll see just how terrible it is. In every version of Windows 7 and prior you could change this, but Windows 10 no longer allows it.
+
* The border around forms has been decreased to a single pixel. This makes reading text near the edges of overlapping forms more difficult. Overlap a couple Command Windows or File Explorers and you'll see just how terrible it is. In every version of Windows 7 and prior you could change this, but Windows 10 no longer allows it. Also, the narrow border messes up resizing. In previous versions of Windows, you would see the visual area where you would need you place your mouse to get the resize cursor, but, because a single pixel isn't wide enough for users, Microsoft now uses the shadowy area around forms as the resizable area. Of course, it doesn't have an obvious edge, so you're again expected to just guess where you need your mouse cursor to be.
 
* Controls like drop-down menus, radio buttons, and check boxes no longer show when they have focus, so you can't tell by looking at a form which control will accept keyboard input.
 
* Controls like drop-down menus, radio buttons, and check boxes no longer show when they have focus, so you can't tell by looking at a form which control will accept keyboard input.
  

Revision as of 09:48, 6 July 2020

Windows 10 is essentially malware.

Windows 10 is the worst version of Windows I've seen as far as user interface and customization are concerned. Below I catalog various problems with Windows 10, and, in some cases, how to bypass them and make the OS at least partially usable again.

Bad UI

The user interface of Windows 10 is one of the worst Microsoft has ever made, for several reasons:

  • Title bars are no longer standard across forms and many programs abandon the default layout. For example, in an attempt to look "clean," the designers removed the visual cues on the title bar section from many of their forms (like the Taskbar settings form). They are now the same color as the background of the form making it much harder to know when you're clicking on the form or the title bar. This causes the user to frequently miss when trying to drag a form by its title bar or double-click it to min/max it. Also, by not having a visible title bar, it's impossible to know at a glance which form has focus.
  • All of the default form controls, which previously used a visually functional 3D style, have been replaced with flat controls like way back on Windows 3. Also, nearly every control is now the same color as the form, including toolbars, side bars, scroll bars, status bars, text boxes, lists, grids, grid headers, etc. Some of them at least have a bounding box, but many of them are now impossible to visually demarcate. This causes a lot of missed-clicks because you can't know which control you're hovering over. This is especially bad when multiple controls that can accept clicks are right next to each other. For example, if you intend to click the first record in a grid, but accidentally click the header by mistake because it's so hard to tell where one begins and the other ends, not only will you not highlight the record you want, but, by clicking the header, you will completely resort the grid, pushing the record you wanted off the display.
  • Several forms now hide the scrollbar almost entirely (it's only two pixels wide and right near the border). To make it visible, you have hover your mouse over a narrow range on the right edge of the form for about a second to make it visible, but it will hide itself again after you move your cursor away from it. This makes it easy to miss any data beyond what is currently visible because, without a scrollbar, it appears as though there is nothing left to see.
  • The border around forms has been decreased to a single pixel. This makes reading text near the edges of overlapping forms more difficult. Overlap a couple Command Windows or File Explorers and you'll see just how terrible it is. In every version of Windows 7 and prior you could change this, but Windows 10 no longer allows it. Also, the narrow border messes up resizing. In previous versions of Windows, you would see the visual area where you would need you place your mouse to get the resize cursor, but, because a single pixel isn't wide enough for users, Microsoft now uses the shadowy area around forms as the resizable area. Of course, it doesn't have an obvious edge, so you're again expected to just guess where you need your mouse cursor to be.
  • Controls like drop-down menus, radio buttons, and check boxes no longer show when they have focus, so you can't tell by looking at a form which control will accept keyboard input.

Can't Customize Colors

Windows 10 removes the majority of color customizations. In most previous versions of Windows, you could set a custom color for pretty much every aspect of the interface including the forms, controls, even to the point of being able to change the highlight and shadow colors of 3D elements. Unfortunately, in Windows 10, they removed this entirely from the theme engine. Now, you can choose only between a bright white form or a total black form (both of which are harsh on the eyes). Your only other option of customization is the screen's background color and a form highlight color (which is not used on several forms), everything else is mandated by the theme with no way to customize it.

Case Change File Refresh Bug

If you rename a file but only change the case of some letters (for example, rename "test" to "Test"), Windows 10 will not refresh the file name. You must manually refresh the file explorer in order to see your changes. This bug existed in Windows 7 as well.

Clear Icon Cache

Nearly every version of Windows stupidly doesn't update the icon cache when an icon file has been altered. It also has a tendency to overflow the cache and display the wrong icons for various files. Both are common problems for icon designers. To force windows to purge its existing icon cache, do the following:

  1. Click Start.
  2. In the Search box, type ie4uinit.exe -ClearIconCache.
  3. Press Enter or click the program in the list.
  4. Windows will clear the icon cache and draw the modified icon.

Control Panel vs. Windows Settings

Ever since Windows 3, Microsoft has placed the configuration programs for Windows in a section called Control Panel. In Windows 10, Microsoft moved some of the functions out of Control Panel and put them in a new section called Windows Settings. So, instead of there being a single place for all of settings, there are now two, and a Windows user just has to know which one has the setting they're looking for. The new Windows Settings has a much poorer user interfaces and, for some strange reason, doesn't support alphabetical sorting or icon listing. Thankfully, a lot of the functions were duplicated and still exist in Control Panel, but this means you have semi-duplicated programs on your computer wasting space and confusing users.

An example of a setting that has been duplicated is the setting for changing the system clock. In Control Panel it's called "Date and Time," and in Windows Settings, it's called "Time & Language." An example of a setting that has been eliminated from Control Panel and moved to Windows Settings is "Display" which is now confusingly called "System." Several settings were removed from Control Panel and not added to Windows Settings at all eliminating them entirely, including "Desktop Gadgets," "Getting Started," "HomeGroups," "Performance Information and Tools," and "Windows CardSpace."

Default Applications Can No Longer Be Changed Easily

Even when running with administrator privileges, a program can no longer automatically change which application should open a file extension by default. For example, if you install a PDF viewer, it cannot replace Edge as the default viewer. Instead, you have to manually set this, either by right-clicking on the file and changing the default viewer, or by using the hugely bloated Default Apps form which has hundreds of extensions for files you don't even have installed and requires a lot of manual filtering or multiple clicks for each extension. This is especially obnoxious for programs which have a lot of file extension support like foobar2000 and 7-Zip, which now require the user to do a lot of manual selection.

Disable/Enabled Visual Effects

Windows 10 slows down your ability to use it with a lot of stupid animations. Some of these are a little helpful at letting you keep track of what is going on, but others are very slow and/or obtrusive. To toggle various animations off or on, do the following:

  1. Open Control Panel.
  2. Open System.
  3. In the left menu, click Advanced system settings.
  4. In the System Properties dialog, select the Advanced tab.
  5. Under Performance, click Settings.
  6. In the Visual Effects tab, check or uncheck the visual effects you desire.

Dragging Programs Out of the Search Results

In Windows 7, when you searched for files, you could drag a file from the results list and copy, move, or create a short-cut directly from the list. Windows 10 eliminated this feature. Thankfully, in a later version, they added it back.

File Explorer Has Confusing Whitespace Interaction

In Windows 10 File Explorer, when using the List or Small Icons views, you now interact with files and folders based on the whitespace after their names. Windows 10 functions the same as Windows 7 when interacting with the icon and name portions of files and folders, but whitespace interaction is different and unpredictable depending on what you're doing. Below I describe how whitespace interaction works:

  • Left-click: Left-clicking the whitespace of a file selects it.
  • Right-click: Right-clicking the whitespace of a file that is selected opens its context menu, but right-clicking the whitespace of a file that is highlighted confusingly opens the context menu of File Explorer.
  • Double-click: Double-clicking the whitespace of a file opens it.
  • Second click: You might think that performing a second click on the whitespace of a selected file would activate the file rename function, but it does nothing.
  • Left-click, hold, and move: Even though it looks like you're going to interact with it because of the highlighting, if you left-click, hold, and move the cursor in the whitespace of a file, you will not begin dragging it. Instead create a selection box as though you were in the whitespace of File Explorer. The selection box now selects all files it touches by their whitespace, so you can no longer select files based on their file length like in Windows 7.
  • Drag-and-drop transfers: Drag-and-dropping onto the whitespace of folders transfers into them and drag-and-dropping onto the whitespace of executables launches them, so be very careful when drag-and-dropping files into a File Explorer that has a lot of folders or executables because it is easy to inadvertently transfer or activate your files. You either have to carefully position your cursor in the narrow strips between the columns or scroll to the end of the file list where there is true File Explorer whitespace each time you transfer a file.

This unwanted behavior appears to have been added in the Creator's Update, and, according to a Microsoft forum, it's impossible to revert back to the far more intuitive Windows 7 functionality.

Strangely, although whitespace highlighting was added to List and Small Icons views, it was not added to Medium, Large, and Extra Large Icons views.

Fixing the Start Menu

The start menu in Windows 10 is an absolute mess:

  • Even if you paid for Windows 10, it's full of advertisements for garbage Microsoft products. You actually paid Microsoft to show you ads!
  • Rather than group programs intelligently, it lists every single program on your computer (and many you don't even have, see above!). To find the program you want, you now have to scroll down a huge list.
  • Most of the customization abilities seen in previous versions of Windows have been removed so you can't make it look the way you want.
  • It takes up the entire screen, obfuscating any open windows you might want to see.

Later versions of Windows 10 made it slightly less hideous, but it's still pretty much impossible to make it function in a useful manner. Most people get around this by using the keyboard to type in what they want to find in the search bar, but this defeats the entire point of a mouse-drive graphical user interface. Since it can't be configured, you'll have to resort to a third-party solution. Classic Shell will give you a much higher level of control over your start menu and File Explorer menus.

Hide Windows Notifications

In previous versions of Windows, you could move the notifications icon into the hidden fold in the system tray, Windows 10 has removed this ability. Notifications are now also populated with desperate attempts at getting you to buy shitty Microsoft products. If anyone figures out a way to hide this, let me know.

Installation Requires Microsoft Account

Microsoft now requires you to setup a Microsoft just to install Windows 10. There is no button to skip it, and leaving the entry blank results in an error. Thankfully, in order to accommodate stand-alone computers, Microsoft will not pop this dialog if you're not connected to the Internet. So, to bypass this obnoxious demand, you can unplug your Ethernet cable, or, if you have wireless, use a hardware disable switch. This will allow you to create a local account for your computer instead. The next time you boot your computer with Internet access, i will try again to make you create a Microsoft account, but now you can close the dialog.

Quick Launch Toolbar

The Quick Launch Toolbar was a wonderful feature of Windows XP that was removed in Windows Vista which used the less-intuitive and more cluttered Pin system. To re-enable the quick launch, do the following:

  1. Right-click on the taskbar.
  2. Select the Toolbars menu.
  3. Click on New Toolbar...
  4. Navigate to .\Users\Your User\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch.
  5. Highlight the Quick Launch folder, and click "Select Folder".
  6. Right-click on the new Quick Launch toolbar in the taskbar.
  7. In the menu, uncheck "Show Title" and "Show Text".
  8. Use the toolbar's handle to drag it fully to left to position it like XP.

Open Command Window Here Removed From Shift-Click Menu

In Windows 7 and prior, you could shift-click in a File Explorer to add the item "Open command window here" into the context menu. This was very useful to users who needed to run command line programs, but few people knew about it because Microsoft stupidly hid the feature. Unfortunately, Windows 10 replaced it with "Open PowerShell window here," which often requires more effort to perform the same basic features as Command Window and lacks some of the features all together.

Re-Enable Volume Mixer

Being able to easily adjust volume per application was one of the few decent Windows Vista improvements, so, naturally, Windows 10 removed it and returned to the less-functional single master volume slider like Windows 95. The Volume Mixer has a master volume control, but also includes application-specific volume sliders. To set the taskbar volume icon back to opening the more useful Volume Mixer, do the following:

  1. Open RegEdit.
  2. Navigate to the key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion
  3. If there isn't a key named MTCUVC, create one.
  4. Inside of the MTCUCV key, if there isn't a D-Word (32-bit) Value named EnableMtcUvc, create one (it's case-sensitive).
  5. Double-click the EnableMtcUvc value, set its Value Data to 0, and click OK.
  6. The taskbar volume icon will now open to the Volume Mixer by default once more.

Set a Default Folder Style

In File Explorer -> View -> Options -> View -> Apply to Folders, Windows claims to allow you to set a default icon view (details, list, large icons, etc.) for all folders. As far as I can tell, the Apply to Folders and Reset Folders buttons has not worked since Windows XP, and every version of Windows since only partially processes these buttons for a few folders or just the folder you're in. Instead, Windows attempts to guess at how the files should be viewed based on their extensions. If there are a lot of media files in a folder, it will switch to large icon view, even if you set the default to list view. If you want to change the icon view and have Windows remember it, you have to manually set the icon view to your favorite, usually twice, and Windows will then honor the new view. This won't change the view for file open and save dialogs, you will have to manually set those as well, usually twice. If you every change the drive's letter, you will have to do this all over again. If anyone can find a way to get this to work properly, please let me know.

Setting a Custom Background Color

The latest version of Windows 10 finally reverted back the ability to set the background to a custom color and added decent colors to choose from, but the earlier versions were garbage and required to to have to use run an older program to get access:

control /name Microsoft.Personalization /page pageWallpaper

Slow File Operations

File operations like copying, moving, and deleting files seems to be much slower of Windows 10 than Windows 7. I'm not sure if this is just because Windows 10 truly is slower, or if it's because the OS pops a dialog for all slows actions sooner than Windows 7. I've just noticed that you can frequently see the progress bar moving during a file action that should take only a few microseconds to perform.

Turn Off User Account Control

Microsoft assumes that the default Windows user is incompetent (probably a safe bet) and pops an annoying nag message every time you try to do anything of substance on your computer. This was added to prevent users from granting admin rights to dangerous programs, but, if the user is stupid enough to install a virus, does Microsoft really think a confirmation dialog is going to solve the problem? To turn this waste of time off:

  1. Open Control Panel.
  2. Select Security and Maintenance.
  3. On the left side, click Change User Account Control settings.
  4. Drop the slider all the way to the bottom.
  5. Give a middle finger to Microsoft's "Not recommended" warning.

Turn Off Admin Nag Message For File Access

Even with UAC entirely off, Windows 10 feels it necessary to require a nag message every time you modify files anywhere on your boot drive outside of your User folder. To turn this off entirely, do the following:

  1. Open RegEdit.
  2. Drill down to: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System
  3. In the right pane look for EnableLUA and modify its value to 0.
  4. Close RegEdit, reboot.

Turn Off Updates

When Windows 10 first came out, you couldn't stop or even pause updates, and, when they need to reboot your system, they would do so without your permission, often destroying all unsaved data in the process. The latest version allows you to temporarily pause updates for a short period of time and gives you some control over when you have to reboot, but not full control, and the reboot notification often remains hidden in the systray. Many people prefer to disable updates because Microsoft has a long history of creating updates that damage or corrupt systems under certain circumstances and they often sneak hidden spyware into their updates.

I haven't looked too deep into how to permanently turn off, but here is a guide which claims to be able to do it.

Links

Link-Wikipedia.png