1. God Mode
It may be hyperbolically named, but Windows 7’s God Mode is indeed omnipresent.
It conveniently puts hundreds of settings from all around the operating system all in one place. To turn on God Mode, create a new folder on your desktop, or anywhere you’d like,and name it: GodMode.
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The resulting folder will contain 270 items, representing virtually every configurable option in Windows 7.
2. Reliability Monitor
When your system is acting flaky and you ‘retrying to figure out what’s going on, the Reliability Monitor may help. Search for “reliability” from the Start menu, and run View Reliability History. You’ll get a graph of your system’s “stability index” over a period of days and weeks (rated on a scale of 1 to 10). It displays which programs, Windows components, or miscellaneous items crashed on a given day, helping you identify problem items.
3. Problem Steps Recorder
When you need outside PC help, it’s much better to let them see for themselves what’s happening on your system. But if remote access isn’t an option, the Problem Steps Recorder may be the next best thing. Search for and run psr from the Start menu. Click Start Record, and the utility will record your activities through a series of screen shots, automatically including captions that show exactly where you clicked. You can also use the Add Comment button to highlight specific areas of the screen and insert custom annotations. When you stop recording, everything will be stitched together and saved as a Web browser-compatible MHTML (MIME HTML) file, conveniently pre-Zipped and ready for e-mailing to your geek of choice.
4. Power Efficiency Report
If your Windows 7 laptop isn’t getting the battery life you expect or it experiences power-related issues, such as the inability to go into standby or hibernate mode, the problem usually lies with incorrectly configured power-management settings. Windows 7’s Power Efficiency Report can help you sniff out potential problems. Type search for CMD from the Start menu, run it as an administrator (right-click cmd.exe on the menu and choose Run as administrator).
From the command prompt, type powercfg -ENERGY (include the space) to scan your system, and after about a minute, you’ll find a file called energy-report.html in your \windows\system32 folder. Copy the report to another location and open it (you’ll get a file-not-found error if you try to open it from the system32 folder) for detailed information about what system devices or settings are throwing a monkey wrench into your power management.
5. Wipe Free Disk Space
It’s no secret that when you delete files or folders in Windows, they’re not actually erased; the space they took up is simply marked as “available for use,” which allows the files to be recoverable until they’re overwritten with new data. There is a utility built into Windows (even XP Pro and vista) that will overwrite all the free space on a hard drive, insuring any files you’ve deleted stay dead. Launch a command prompt and type cipher /w:X (X is the letter of the drive or partition you want to wipe). be patient; the process can take a long time if you have a lot of free space.
6. Hotkey A window between monitors
Want an easy and mouse-free way to move
Windows around a display or, better yet, between multiple monitors? When you
Press the Windows key along with the left or right arrow key, the active window will move from its original position and anchor itself to the edge of the screen in the direction of the arrow, and it will do so across every monitor you have. Similarly, if you press the Windows, SHIFT, and the left or right arrow keys at the same time, the active window will jump over to the same position on the adjacent monitor.
7. Snipping tool
This helps to capture the window image.
Search for and run sni from the Start menu.
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