Windows 10 Performance tweaks
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I have a hard time remembering different tweaks over time.
I figured I'd start a thread. Feel free to add to the list.
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If the system is sluggish and the disk appears to be the main issue, try disabling superfetch and reboot. -
Gotta have that decrapifier PS script. The fork of this project has a slightly newer version, I have not tested that one. Main script works great.
https://gist.github.com/ThaddeusAid/55a137fb48fc01594eca4e89a025b456
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Countdown till someone posts "Install Fedora".
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@scottalanmiller You just did.
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@Dashrender said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I have a hard time remembering different tweaks over time.
I figured I'd start a thread. Feel free to add to the list.
:
If the system is sluggish and the disk appears to be the main issue, try disabling superfetch and reboot.Remove the old spinner and use an SSD.
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Keep startup items at a minimal.
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@Obsolesce said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
@Dashrender said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I have a hard time remembering different tweaks over time.
I figured I'd start a thread. Feel free to add to the list.
:
If the system is sluggish and the disk appears to be the main issue, try disabling superfetch and reboot.Remove the old spinner and use an SSD.
Definitely SSD's. For many of my employees and clients, based on their actual needs, an old icore5 with an SSD makes Win10 run very smooth.
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Windows Start Menu replacements:
Open-Shell - Formerly Classic Shell (my personal favorite)
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@pmoncho : I have to ask: why? I understand if you're using Windows 8.1 or the first couple versions of Windows 10 with the weird start menu but with current revisions the start menu differs very little from Windows 7. Turn off the groups on the right hand side and it's just a more modern skin to the old...
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@manxam said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
@pmoncho : I have to ask: why? I understand if you're using Windows 8.1 or the first couple versions of Windows 10 with the weird start menu but with current revisions the start menu differs very little from Windows 7. Turn off the groups on the right hand side and it's just a more modern skin to the old...
Not the greatest answer but, its because my users know what "Start" means and when they are told to "Start and Log Off" they know exactly what I mean and where to move the mouse and which button to press.
Most of my users don't understand what "Right Click" mean. Yeah, its that bad! UGH
Its funny how users can manipulate their home pc's, create and send emails, scan, move, manipulate, attach files to emails and move all around. Then when they get to work, it all goes out the window and "I don't know how to do that!" Double UGH!
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@pmoncho said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
@manxam said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
@pmoncho : I have to ask: why? I understand if you're using Windows 8.1 or the first couple versions of Windows 10 with the weird start menu but with current revisions the start menu differs very little from Windows 7. Turn off the groups on the right hand side and it's just a more modern skin to the old...
Not the greatest answer but, its because my users know what "Start" means and when they are told to "Start and Log Off" they know exactly what I mean and where to move the mouse and which button to press.
Most of my users don't understand what "Right Click" mean. Yeah, its that bad! UGH
Its funny how users can manipulate their home pc's, create and send emails, scan, move, manipulate, attach files to emails and move all around. Then when they get to work, it all goes out the window and "I don't know how to do that!" Double UGH!
If their job is using a computer, they need to learn to use the computer. End of discussion.
You don't hire engine mechanics and just deal with them never learning how to open the hood for the lifetime of their employment. You expect them to learn how to open it, or turn on a car, even if the car changes.
Your users must learn computer basics if their job depends on them.
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I don't understand how people get hired in the fist place, for a computer job, if they can't understand how to use a computer.
They can learn, I mean, they learned to do what it is they do... they should keep up with the tool used to do the work.
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@Obsolesce said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I don't understand how people get hired in the fist place, for a computer job, if they can't understand how to use a computer.
They can learn, I mean, they learned to do their computer work... keep up with the tool used to do the work.
Agreed. Long gone are the days when "hee hee, I'm not good with computers" was a viable excuse. Most of the folks legitimately old enough to say that are retired now. Everybody else, get with the program.
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@RojoLoco said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
@Obsolesce said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I don't understand how people get hired in the fist place, for a computer job, if they can't understand how to use a computer.
They can learn, I mean, they learned to do their computer work... keep up with the tool used to do the work.
Agreed. Long gone are the days when "hee hee, I'm not good with computers" was a viable excuse. Most of the folks legitimately old enough to say that are retired now. Everybody else, get with the program.
Most would be dead now. Computers in the office were standard forty years ago. If you were forty when you first got computers at work, not understanding them isn't a viable excuse. For a white collar worker there is really no age where there is a viable excuse for not having kept up for four decades.
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@RojoLoco said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
Agreed. Long gone are the days when "hee hee, I'm not good with computers" was a viable excuse. Most of the folks legitimately old enough to say that are retired now. Everybody else, get with the program.
Funny that you should say that. I recently on-boarded a new receptionist for a client who appears to be in her late-30s to early-40s. She just kept going on-and-on about how she "wasn't good with computers" and I still hear that a lot with people within my approximate age group (40ish).
I really fail to understand how these people get hired as these are the same individuals that cost the most in IT related charges. e.g. things that can easily be remedied by rebooting their computer, putting paper in a printer, or replacing the batteries in their wireless keyboard.
EDIT: <rant>I should state that I was there this past week and using this particular computer about 2 weeks after her on-boarding. I couldn't log into Windows and then noticed that the username was missing a character and the password kept appearing shorter than it should be. After finally logging in, I opened notepad and typed some words noting that 1/3 of the characters were dropped. The keyboard batteries were dying.
When I asked her about it she replied with "I don't use the keyboard that much and, when I do, it works just fine".
I watched her for a little while after I was finished and noticed that she typed at about 25 wpm giving the keyboard ample time to catch up. My typing at 90 wpm (which is roughly what a receptionist should type at I would think?) would give it fits. Don't even get me started about the "...don't use the keyboard" comment. What do you DO all day?!</rant> -
@pmoncho said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
Not the greatest answer but, its because my users know what "Start" means and when they are told to "Start and Log Off" they know exactly what I mean and where to move the mouse and which button to press.
Most of my users don't understand what "Right Click" mean. Yeah, its that bad! UGH
Its funny how users can manipulate their home pc's, create and send emails, scan, move, manipulate, attach files to emails and move all around. Then when they get to work, it all goes out the window and "I don't know how to do that!" Double UGH!
I understand. There are still so many users that completely "shut down" when faced with change. They don't even ATTEMPT to figure it out, they just mentally switch off. I understand that in my 75 year old mother, but don't understand how that's acceptable in a business setting in this day-and-age.
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@Obsolesce said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I don't understand how people get hired in the fist place, for a computer job, if they can't understand how to use a computer.
They can learn, I mean, they learned to do what it is they do... they should keep up with the tool used to do the work.
Trust me. You guys are preaching to the choir here. I even make slight comments, while laughing "with" them, after they make such statements, "so basically we should hire a carpenter who doesn't know how to use a hammer?"
To give my users a minuscule amount of credit, they are basically in a single application for 95% of their job and they learn that software inside and out.
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@pmoncho said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
@Obsolesce said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I don't understand how people get hired in the fist place, for a computer job, if they can't understand how to use a computer.
They can learn, I mean, they learned to do what it is they do... they should keep up with the tool used to do the work.
Trust me. You guys are preaching to the choir here. I even make slight comments, while laughing "with" them, after they make such statements, "so basically we should hire a carpenter who doesn't know how to use a hammer?"
To give my users a minuscule amount of credit, they are basically in a single application for 95% of their job and they learn that software inside and out.
So they can't be bothered to learn left click from right click??? Sounds like a bunch of morons who should have flunked kindergarten. I had that user base many times in the past, and I managed to get out without murdering anyone. Run away screaming and find greener pastures. Life is too fucking short to make excuses for fucktards. You deserve better users. Go find them elsewhere.
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@Obsolesce said in Windows 10 Performance tweaks:
I don't understand how people get hired in the fist place, for a computer job, if they can't understand how to use a computer.
They can learn, I mean, they learned to do what it is they do... they should keep up with the tool used to do the work.
What I don't get even more so is the fact that people have the option of what to use, Apple or Windows, and they choose the tool that they've never used and expect to be trained on every little thing.
YOU PICKED THIS TOOL, YOU SHOULD KNOW HOW TO USE IT
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Users that are computer literate.