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#Powertoys com full
Full window manager including specific layouts for docking and undocking laptops.Over at the official GitHub page for these utilities the developers share some other PowerToys plans and ideas which they would like user help to prioritise. In the meantime it might pop up by accident sometimes but its usefulness hopefully would outweigh that annoyance. This tool is a cool tutorial feature and it might not be needed after a period of time in use as one could easily learn favourite shortcuts through experience. You can see what it offers from the screenshot below. This PowerToy works by adding a shortcut guide overlay when users press the Windows key for a second or longer. If it could be modified for multiple monitors, that would be welcome for some users too. If you are a multi-desktop user you will appreciate that a quick click of this popup will create a new desktop and send the app over there, in maximised form. With this tool installed and active, users will see a pop-up button when they hover the cursor over the maximise/restore button of any window. The MTND widget is rather a self explanatory named tool. These tools will become available in preview from summer and I have looked closer at each below. Microsoft has rekindled the PowerToys concept with two new mini-apps which are designed to "provide power users with ways to squeeze more efficiency out of the Windows 10 shell and customize it for individual workflows". The ones I remember using most were QuickRes, FlexiCD and TweakUI but there were rather a lot released back in the 95/XP eras. These were a collection of additional tools that 'power users' could download to provide shortcuts and enhancements for everyday Windows usage, some more popular than others, and some so compelling that they would graduate into becoming standard OS features. Many of the older and more experienced HEXUS readers will remember Microsoft's PowerToys for Windows 95, and later for Windows XP.