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Eight Ways to Use the Windows Recovery Environment to Rescue Your PC

By: David Nield

In an ideal world, nothing would ever go wrong with your Windows laptop or desktop—but as you know, the sun doesn't always shine, your favorite sports team doesn't always win, and you might occasionally run into problems with your PC. If that happens, Microsoft has provided a suite of troubleshooting tools called the Windows Recovery Environment (or WinRE for short) to help you solve the issue yourself.

You might not be too familiar with WinRE, which is a positive sign—it probably means your computing has largely been trouble-free in recent times. However, it's worth knowing about the options that these utilities offer, whether you're experiencing problems right now or want to be well prepared in the future.

What is the Windows Recovery Environment?

Windows Recovery Environment
The first Windows Recovery Environment screen. Credit: Lifehacker

First and foremost, WinRE is a way to solve issues stopping your PC from starting up normally. It may even appear automatically if your computer doesn't boot properly—it's built right into Windows systems, so there's nothing to download or install. You can also use WinRE to reset Windows and return it to its original state, in addition to the reset option in Windows Settings.

If you can get into Windows normally, you can launch the Windows Recovery Environment by opening Settings and choosing System > Recovery > Restart now. If not, you might see WinRE appear automatically—most systems should be configured to launch the utility after two or three failed boot attempts.

Alternatively, there will be a key you can press during boot up to launch WinRE rather than Windows: If you're not sure what it is, check the documentation that came with your PC, or search online for your make and model of computer. For some Asus computers it's F12, for example, and for some Dell computers, it's the Windows key.

All the Windows Recovery Environment options (and how they work)

Use a device

The first option you'll see lets you boot from a USB drive or a DVD rather than your hard drive, which you might need to do if you can't start up your PC normally. From there, you can carry out further troubleshooting or reinstall Windows. If you need to create a USB drive or DVD to boot from, check out Microsoft's guide.

Alongside Use a device, and options to turn off your PC or carry on to Windows, there's a Troubleshoot entry on the menu. Select this for more options.

Reset this PC

This is the first option under Troubleshoot. Choosing a reset will do just that: reset Windows to its original settings, hopefully clearing up any issues you've been having. Along the way, you'll be asked if you want to wipe all your personal files and programs too—the reset is more comprehensive if you do, but you'll need to move all of your data back again afterwards, so make sure it's safely backed up somewhere first.

Windows Recovery Environment
The reset option might be all you need to get Windows working again. Credit: Lifehacker

If Use a device or Reset this PC aren't the solutions you're after, you can dig deeper into the Windows Recovery Environment by choosing Advanced options.

Startup Repair

With this option, Windows will attempt to fix some of the more common issues relating to startup, with no further input required from you. It'll look at the key files controlling the boot up process, registry files, and drivers. Fingers crossed, you'll be back into the normal Windows environment in just a few minutes.

Startup Settings

This gives you some alternatives to booting Windows in the usual way, including the classic Safe Mode, which loads the operating system with as few configuration files and drivers as possible. By starting a stripped-down version of Windows rather than full-fat Windows, you may be able to bypass any issues and troubleshoot your problems further—by removing malware, for example.

Command Prompt

This opens up a text-based command prompt window, a throwback to the days of MS-DOS. As its so bare bones, you may be able to get command prompts working even if you can't get into Windows—so file commands, for example, or further diagnostic checks. For more details on command prompts, see Microsoft's guide.

Windows Recovery Environment
There are several troubleshooting approaches you can take. Credit: Lifehacker

Uninstall Updates

Sometimes a Windows update will cause problems for your system (and maybe many others, too). This option lets you view updates that have recently been applied to the operating system, and remove them if needed—which may then enable you to get into Windows as normal.

UEFI Firmware Settings

This is where you can make changes to the fundamental UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) software that works underneath Windows (and which has now replaced the BIOS). You're able to check on the status of hard drives and peripherals, and make sure your computer is working at the most basic level—we've written a more detailed UEFI guide here.

System Restore

Essentially, System Restore rolls Windows back to an earlier point in time, ideally undoing whatever change is causing your current PC woes (it'll uninstall apps that have recently been added, for example). These restore points should have been automatically created by Windows, and you'll be prompted to pick one from the list, depending on how far you want to go back.

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This Mac App Lets You Create As Many Virtual Desktops As You Want

By: Justin Pot

I like to use my computer's desktop the way I use my physical desktop—somewhere to place documents and photos related to what I'm currently working on. The problem is that I'm usually working on multiple projects, meaning my computer desktop is a mess of unrelated things.

Say I'm selling my old Macbook but also organizing important cat pictures for my newsletter—that all takes up a lot of space, and I don't need to see all of those photos all the time. Wouldn't it be better if I could switch which things show up on my desktop depending on my current project?

That's idea behind Infinidesk, an indie Mac app from developer Ben Shirt-Ediss that lets you create as many virtual desktops as you like and switch between them from the menu bar.

The menu bar icon offers three different desktops: Default, Lifehacker articles, and Cat pictures.
Credit: Justin Pot

The idea behind Infinidesk is that you'll make different desktops for different projects, allowing you to use your desktop as a workspace for each of them. This isn't at all like your Mac's native Mission Control—it doesn't affect the windows you have open. The focus, instead, is simply on the icons visible on your desktop. You can create as many different desktops as you need to. When you create a new desktop, all of your current icons will disappear, allowing you to add new ones. When you switch between desktops, all of your icons will disappear and reappear accordingly.

It's a simple concept, and it won't be useful for everyone—only some of us even still use our desktops to store files at this point, and you might already have your own system for keeping things organized. But if your desktop is spiraling out of control, Infinidesk might help you keep things tidy without making the desktop useless in the process—especially if you have one computer for both work and personal use.

Infinidesk offers a free version, with a catch: you can only switch desktops 50 times. That should be enough for you to get a feel for whether this application is useful for you, though. The full version costs $12.99, as a one-time payment.

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The Blue Screen of Death Is Dead

By: Michelle Ehrhardt

Microsoft's iconic Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) is dead after 40 years. RIP to the most panic-inducing screen a Windows user can encounter. Now, get ready to fear the Black Screen of Death.

In a blog post on its website today, the company revealed it's ready to go live with an error screen redesign it's been testing since March. In an update to all Windows 11, version 24H2 devices coming "later this summer," the BSOD will finally be put out of its misery.

It's likely to be a bittersweet moment for Windows users, who will undoubtedly have mixed feelings about the warning's fate. Despite its ominous name, getting a BSOD wasn't always as serious as it seemed—a simple crash could trigger it, and restarting could easily fix it. It could be worse than that, too, but in many cases, the old BSOD simply added a bit of personality to the most annoying interruptions to your workflow. Especially in recent years, when you would see a sideways frowning emoticon alongside your error message.

But sometimes, personality isn't what you need, especially when you're already stressed out about your computer encountering a serious error. Businesses and travelers alike were bombarded with a particularly unsolvable Blue Screen of Death during last year's extended Crowdstrike outage, so it makes sense why Microsoft might want to move away from any association with it.

Black Screen of Death
Credit: Microsoft

Enter the new Black Screen of Death. Looking more like other Windows error messages, this is a simple black screen that says, in white text, that "Your device ran into a problem and needs to restart." Below that is a progress counter, alongside your error code and which process triggered it.

"The updated UI improves readability and aligns better with Windows 11 design principles," Microsoft Vice President of Enterprise and OS Security David Weston said in today's blog post.

I'll agree that it's arguably a bit less ominous then the current BSOD, which spends a lot of screen space on that big frowning emoticon, and used to say "Your PC ran into a problem that it couldn't handle" before anything else. Personally, I think the new approach might better reflect most situations that might trigger a BSOD—they're usually not as scary as they seem. Plus, the old error screen didn't actually tell you which process failed, so seeing that on its replacement is a nice bonus (it would occasionally show a QR code, but I often couldn't get it scanned before my computer restarted).

Still, part of me will miss the old Blue Screen of Death, in the same way I miss the Red Ring of Death that claimed my first Xbox 360. Stockholm syndrome, I suppose?

At any rate, Microsoft says that when it releases the new Black Screen of Death (not the official name for the error message, but neither was "Blue Screen of Death"), it will also release a new Quick Machine Recovery feature, which will help you access PCs that can't restart normally. In other words, the company is trying to make sure we won't get another Crowdstrike incident anytime soon. And if we do, it'll hopefully make us feel a little less blue.

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'Screenbox' Is a Sleek and Capable VLC-Based Video Player for Windows

By: Justin Pot

Looking for a Windows video player that looks nice, is easy to use, and supports every media file you can imagine? Screenbox is a free and open source application that fits perfectly in Windows 11. It's the media player Microsoft should have made for its own operating system.

We've talked about IINA, a sleek Mac alternative to VLC. Screenbox is the Windows version of that. It goes without saying that VLC is a powerful video player—if you like it, you should absolutely keep using it. But there are downsides: VLC's various toggles can feel cluttered and overwhelming and the mostly gray application doesn't exactly blend in on a modern Windows desktop. Screenbox is built using LibVLCSharp, meaning it supports every media format VLC does and offers the same performance. The big difference is the user interface.

And what a difference it is. Open a video with this application and you'll see a beautiful player with only buttons that are useful. And there are some nice features included too. The player supports YouTube's hidden keyboard shortcuts, meaning if you're learned those, you'll be able to use them in your desktop video player. There's also picture-in-picture support, allowing you to play a video in the background while you're working on something else.

The application also offers a media library feature, if you want it. By default, your video and music folders are included—you can add more folders in the settings. I find this particularly nice for browsing music. You can explore by track, album, or artist.

A screenshot showing the user scrolling through CAKE's discography in Screenbox
Credit: Justin Pot

But most people, I suspect, are going to use this just to open the occasional file, not manage a library. I like that it works for both use cases, though. Check it out if you haven't found the perfect Windows media player yet—it might work for you.

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Use This Free App to Track Sports Scores in Your Mac’s Menu Bar

By: Justin Pot

It's a sad fact of life: Sometimes you have to work when you'd rather be watching the game. I can't fix that problem for you, sadly, but I can give you a way to keep track of the score on your Mac.

Apple offers a great sports scores app for the iPhone, which is the best way to keep track of the score while you're doing something else. There's nothing like that from Apple for the Mac, though, which I find a little disappointing. Sure, you can ask Siri for the score, but there's no way to passively keep track of the score while you're working on something else. Happily, there's a free app that puts the score for many major leagues right in your menu bar: the aptly named MenuScores.

This is a free and open source application that offers scores for major sports leagues in both Europe and North America. Just install the application and you'll see "Select a Game" in the menu bar. Click this and you'll see a list of leagues—hover over any of them to see a list of games. Click a game and you'll know the score every time you glance at the menu bar. You can optionally get a notification when the game starts and ends.

The settings screen for MenuScores, which includes the option to enable or disable notifications, how frequently scores should refresh, which leagues you want to see, and whether the application should start up at boot.
Credit: Justin Pot

The supported leagues include the NHL, NBA, NCAA men's and women's basketball, the NFL, MLB, F1, PGA, LPGA, EUFA Champions league, EPL, ESP, GER, ITA, and NLL. Most sports fans aren't going to want to see all of theses, so you can disable any league in the settings. You can also disable notifications and configure how often scores should refresh—options range from every five seconds to every five minutes. Scores are pulled in using ESPN's API.

The application isn't perfect. It would be nice if I could get more details about games by clicking them, even if that meant opening a website. I also wish there was support for MLS games. Even so, this is a great tool if you're a fan of even one supported league. I know I'll be opening ii late in the afternoon most days during hockey season.

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Use This App to Add Windows-Style Auto Scrolling to macOS

By: Justin Pot

You just set up your brand new Mac and are about to scroll through a long document. You press the middle button on your mouse, expecting to be able to scroll by moving your cursor the way you can on Windows or Linux. Nothing happens. What gives?

It turns out macOS doesn't support this feature, sometimes called auto scrolling. There are all kinds of little annoyances when you switch from one operating system to another, even if you prefer the operating system you're switching to. This is an example of that but, as usual, there's an application you can install to get things working the way you expect.

Scrollapp is a free and open-source application that does one thing: Add the fast scrolling feature to your Mac. This simple application can be downloaded from the website and installed by dragging it to your Applications folder. You might see a security warning after trying to run it—you'll have to head to Security and Privacy in the Settings app to enable the application. After you do that, you'll see Scrollapp running in the menu bar, as seen above.

After that, you should be able to scroll the way you did on Windows—just click the middle button and move your mouse. You can also enable the feature from the menu bar—just click the Start/Stop Auto-Scroll option—or by pressing the Control key and scrolling a little. That last option is great for trackpads.

The speed of scrolling depends on how far your cursor moves from the starting point, meaning you can scroll more quickly by moving your cursor farther. It's a great way to power through a long document when you're looking for something specific.

Disabling the auto scrolling is simple: Just click the left mouse button, or click the middle button again.

This is a simple application, granted, but it solves a specific problem that new Mac users have. If you have more such problems, we've got advice about adding the best Windows features to your Mac, so be sure to read that for more tips like this one.

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Someone Made an Actual AI Clippy

By: Justin Pot

AI always reminds me of Clippy, the infamous talking paperclip added to Microsoft Office in the '90s. This little guy frustrated users, was based on a faulty understanding of how people want to use technology, and had a way of showing up even after you specifically turned it off.

It was probably inevitable, then, for someone to make a tool that combines large language models and the 30-year-old animated paperclip. That someone is developer Felix Rieseberg, who built a Windows 95-themed Clippy app that can run real large language models on your computer. The application is available on Windows, Mac, and Linux devices, and works offline.

Clippy looks just the way you remember and hovers over whatever you're working on. He cycles through several animations. Click on him to start chatting, the way you would with any other large language model. The application works offline, meaning you can chat with Clippy on a train or airplane if you really want to.

To be clear: this is not intended to be a functional tool. Rieseberg calls it an art project he made just because it's fun. "If you get as little as a small chuckle out of it, I’m happy to hear it," says the project's "about" page.

Even so, Clippy is probably the easiest tool I've come across for running large language models locally on a computer. Just download the application, install it, then choose which model you want to run in the Windows 95 themed preferences. The default, Google's Gemma, works well enough.

The models section of the Windows 95 themed settings window.
Credit: Justin Pot

This application is based on Ollama, an open source application built by Meta which makes it possible to run a variety of large language models on your own computer. Clippy offers eight different models to try out. Generally, the larger they are the more system resources they'll take to use—you can try a few different ones to get a feel for how well they work on your device. It's fun, if not entirely practical. Clippy can't access the internet, so you can't get real-time information, and the responses aren't as sophisticated as what you'd get from a top-of-the-line AI service.

There are a few more things you can tweak in the settings, including the default font and whether Clippy should always be on the top. You can also write your own system prompt for Clippy, allowing you to take control of his personality.

This AI-powered art project isn't going to change the world, and it's not supposed to. It's a piece of art, like this musical masterpiece Clippy inspired earlier this year.

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This Extension Gets Rid of YouTube's Annoying Clutter

By: Justin Pot

YouTube is an amazing tool. If there's anything you want to do, from playing an instrument to fixing household appliances, there is a video on the site somewhere outlining exactly how to do it. The problem: YouTube doesn't always act like a tool. It's easy to get sucked down a rabbit hole of related videos, comments, and other distractions (mostly because the site it designed to make sure you do exactly that).

If you wish YouTube behaved more like a tool and less like a dopamine factory, I recommend Untrap. This browser extension, available for Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari, and Opera, lets you make almost 300 tweaks to the YouTube website, allowing you to remove the distracting features and enable a few useful ones by default.

To get started, install the extension and click the icon. You will see a few useful options, including the ability to hide all shorts, but to find the really useful things, click the All Settings box at the bottom. This lets you browse tweaks for every page on the YouTube website, including video pages, the home page, and the search results.

I suggest starting with the place you spend most of your time: video pages. Scroll through the list and you'll find various tweaks you can make. The first thing I did was turn on "Hide Related Videos" and turn on "Automatically Show Chapters." This immediately transforms the space to the right of the video from a rabbit hole of distractions into a tool you can use to browse the currently playing video with intention to find the exact information you're looking for.

A video out dishwashers plays with a list of chapters shown to the right, instead of recommended videos.
Credit: Justin Pot

There are more great features here. You can disable the suggestions that show up at the end of the video. You can force the theater mode, meaning the video will always take up the full width of the screen. You can automatically extend the video description, meaning you'll never again have to click the little "More" button in order to find the link that you're looking for. You can even disable the comments completely, if you wish you spent less time scrolling through them. You're in control.

There are similar options for YouTube's homepage, the subscriptions page, and even the search results. If there's anything about YouTube's interface that you find distracting or generally not useful, just disable it. In an ideal world, YouTube (and every other site) would work this way, but it's nice that there are tools out there that let you customize things.

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When Nothing Else Works, Use the Command Prompt to Shut Down Windows

By: David Nield

In an ideal world, you'd lead a long and happy life only ever shutting down and restarting your PC via the Start menu. Click the power icon, choose your option, and you're done. However, life doesn't always work out like we plan it, and sometimes you may need to trigger a restart or shutdown from the command prompt instead.

Maybe something is stopping the Start menu from working, or perhaps you find yourself on a screen where the Start menu isn't available. One of the scenarios where I use the command prompt to shut down Windows is when I'm in the initial setup phase for the operating system and don't want to complete it right away.

Command prompt
The shutdown command can turn off your PC on a timer. Credit: Lifehacker

You might also have loaded the command prompt interface to try and troubleshoot a problem that's stopping Windows from working—in which case you need to know how to power off or reboot your computer without pressing and holding the power button. (If you are having PC issues, see also this lesser-known emergency restart option.)

Using the command prompt

If you're completely new to the command prompt, it's the text-based interface hidden away in Windows, a remnant of the old days before computer operating systems had pointers and graphical user interfaces, and still useful for running a variety of low-level system operations.

Windows PowerShell
PowerShell doesn't look too different to the command prompt at first glance. Credit: Lifehacker

The command prompt is also accompanied by PowerShell, which is a more modern and feature-rich version of this interface. As far as these shutdown and restart commands are concerned, you can use either for the job, but if you ever need to run more advanced text commands, scripts, and automations, PowerShell is better set up to accommodate them.

You can launch either the command prompt or PowerShell from the Start menu: Just type the first few letters of either utility into the search box at the top to find them. There are various other options too, like right-clicking on the Start menu button and choosing Terminal, or by typing "cmd" into the search box on the taskbar and hitting Enter.

Using the "shutdown" command

The text command you need to either shut down or restart your Windows computer is 'shutdown'. If you type it into the command prompt or PowerShell and then hit Enter, you'll get a full description of shutdown, and all the ways you can use it (by the way, you can add "| more" to this or any command to see a page of text at a time).

Type "shutdown /s" to trigger a standard shutdown

The most basic flags you'll need are "shutdown /s" and "shutdown /r" to power off and restart your computer, respectively. In both cases you'll see a dialog box on screen telling you what's happening, and the action is taken in less than a minute. These commands will initiate a normal shutdown process, so you'll be prompted to save any unsaved work in your open programs that usually do that.

Command prompt
This will restart Windows and launch the advanced boot options screen. Credit: Lifehacker

Type "shutdown /s /f" to force a shutdown

To force all apps to close without any further prompting—perhaps if you need to make sure the shutdown or restart goes through without a hitch—add the "/f" to the end of your command (so, either "shutdown /s /f" for a shutdown or "shutdown /r /f" for a restart). You do this at your own risk though, with the risk of losing data that hasn't already been saved, and it's probably best left as a last resort.

Type "shutdown /r /o" to access advanced boot options

For troubleshooting purposes, the "shutdown /r /o" command is useful because it reboots your computer into the advanced boot options screen. That's the one that gives you access to features such as using a USB drive to recover your PC, running the built-in start-up repair utility, and rolling back recent updates to Windows. You can also get back to the command prompt from here without starting the operating system.

Cancel shutdown
The shutdown command can also be used to stop a shutdown. Credit: Lifehacker

Time your shutdown by adding "/t"

Another flag that can be useful is the "/t" flag followed by a space and a number. This puts the shutdown or the restart on a delay, giving you time to close apps or finish downloads. The number is the number of seconds Windows should wait, and it can go from 0 (instant) all the way up to 315360000—that's 10 years, if you were wondering. If the seconds are set to anything above zero, the "/f" flag is also applied.

Stop a shutdown with "shutdown /a"

One final one that you might find helpful: You can use "shutdown /a" to abort a shutdown that's currently underway (perhaps one that you've set on a timer). For a full rundown of all the ways you can use this command, including some advanced options for IT managers (such as remote shutdowns), check out the official Microsoft documentation.

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A New Start Menu and More Major Upgrades Are Coming to Windows 11

By: David Nield

Alongside a couple of new Surface devices, Microsoft has also announced a number of notable upgrades on the way for Windows 11, covering the Start menu, Copilot AI, and core Windows utilities such as Paint and the Snipping Tool.

The Start menu changes are significant, and I wrote about them last month when they were first spotted in hidden code. The menu is becoming bigger, more customizable, and more usable, with the option to see all apps immediately—and several options for how those apps are arranged on screen.

If you don't want to see recommended shortcuts (to recent files, for example), these can be hidden. You can also increase the size of the pinned apps panel. Another change is the addition of a "phone companion" (essentially the Phone Link app) on the right of the Start menu.

This revamp is coming to the Windows Insider channel in the next month, Microsoft says, and there are several other updates on the same timetable. One is AI actions in File Explorer, which will give you access to AI-powered features from the right-click menu: Think summarizing documents and editing images.

Another feature coming soon to Windows Insider users is AI text generation and summarizing in Notepad, plus lightweight formatting options. For the first time you'll be able to make text bold and italic inside Notepad, and introduce lists and headings. There will also be support for the Markdown formatting language.

Already available to Windows Insiders, and coming soon to everyone else, we have Copilot Vision. It means you can chat with the AI about whatever's on screen—whether you want shopping advice or help with image editing— and Microsoft has previously given us a good idea of how it works.

Features for Copilot+ PCs

Some of the newly announced features are arriving first on Copilot+ PCs (those that meet a certain performance criteria) with Snapdragon chipsets. Again, these updates are appearing in the Windows Insider channel first, before making their way to everyone else with a Copilot+ PC. Microsoft has intimated that they'll roll out eventually to PCs powered by AMD or Intel.

First, Microsoft is putting an AI agent inside Settings, so you can get help finding the toggle switch you need or figuring out how to do something. One example shown in the Microsoft demo is typing "my text is too small" to find the option for font size. The AI agent can even change settings for you, if you give it permission.

We're also getting more actions for the Click to Do feature (essentially an AI-powered, context-sensitive right-click menu), including options to schedule meetings in Teams or launch the Immersive Reader mode for text. Windows search is getting a boost too, with greater coverage for photos, settings, and the Microsoft Store.

The Photos app built into Windows has slowly been getting better and better, and it'll soon pick up a relight feature for dynamic lighting control. You'll be able to set up to three lighting sources, and adjust the brightness and intensity, while seeing the changes on the image in real time.

As for Paint, it's gaining the ability to create custom stickers from text prompts, and a new object select tool that will use AI to select objects with a single click. If you need to move or remove something in an image, this should make the process of selecting it faster and more straightforward.

The Windows Snipping Tool is getting more features as well: intelligent screenshot cropping, the ability to extract text from screenshots, and a color picker. Finally, the Narrator on Copilot+ PCs is being upgraded to offer rich image descriptions, so it'll be able to describe charts, photos, and other visual elements that are on screen.

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This Mac App Gives a Much Needed Upgrade to Copying and Pasting

By: Justin Pot

I couldn't live without copy and paste—it's core to the way I write and work—but it's a pretty abstract feature when you think about it. Copy something and it goes... somewhere. Then you can paste it. Oh, and if you copy a second thing the first thing is gone.

This is a problem solved by clipboard managers. These applications let you review everything you've copied recently and even select an older item to paste it. They work well, but generally require a lot of context switching. What if you want to copy multiple things and then paste them later, all in the order you copied them, without having to open a clipboard manager and choose the items in order? There's a free and open source Mac tool for that: Batch Clipboard (which I found via MacMenuBar).

This application isn't a clipboard manager—in fact, it can easily be used alongside one. With the application running, you can copy text, images, or files using the keyboard shortcut Cmd-Control-C to start building a batch. When you're ready, you can paste them, one at a time starting at the beginning of the batch, using the keyboard shortcut Cmd-Control-V. You can click the menu bar icon at any time to see the current batch.

It takes a second to wrap your head around, but is quite useful in certain contexts. If, for example, you're reading a document and want to collect a few quotes, you can copy each one to your batch and them paste them all to your notes in sequence, taking the time to add a bit of context as you go. This allows you to focus on reading instead of constantly switching back and forth between the source document and your notes.

A screenshot of the application's intro, which explains how to use the batch copy and paste feature.
Credit: Justin Pot

Getting started is simple. After downloading the app, you can launch it to read the quick start guide—it will talk you through using the application and ask you to enable permissions. You can access the settings by clicking the menu bar icon and clicking "Settings". You can customize the keyboard shortcuts, decide whether the application start when your computer does, and change how many history items are visible in the menu. You can also choose for the application to ignore items copied from particular applications.

You could, in theory, use Batch Clipboard as an alternative to a clipboard manager—click the menu bar icon while holding the Option key and you can review everything you copied recently. You could also use it alongside a dedicated clipboard manager, or just open it when you specifically want to use the batch copying feature. Check it out if clipboard managers have never quite clicked with you.

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Windows Has an Emergency Restart Option You Probably Don’t Know About (and I’m Not Talking About Ctrl+Alt+Del)

By: David Nield

The old turn-it-off-and-on-again adage has helped successfully troubleshoot computers for years, but there's more than one way to restart your hardware and software—including a lesser known option on Windows that may well be new to you. It starts with the familiar Ctrl+Alt+Del keystroke, but doesn't end there.

Having spent many years writing about tech, it isn't often that I come across something I didn't already know about. So when I stumbled across this old BetaNews article about an emergency restart feature in Windows, I was taken aback.

It showed a screen and a keystroke combination I had genuinely never heard of before. A bit more digging revealed that this has been in Windows for decades, making it even stranger that I'd never come across it.

Official information on this emergency restart in Windows seems to be thin on the ground, or has perhaps been lost to time. Essentially though, it seems to replicate what a long press on your PC's power button would do: A quick, no-questions-asked reboot of your computer, with the minimum of fuss.

The Windows enthusiasts over on Reddit have spotted this feature before, and there appear to be plenty of people on the boards who hadn't come across it until their attention was drawn toward it. If you dig into those threads you'll find some technical information on what exactly is going on behind the scenes, and the different calls that the feature might be making.

It's worth emphasizing that this is very much a last resort option, as indeed the feature itself will tell you. You're not going to get a chance to save anything you're working on, as is the case if you force a reboot by pressing and holding the power button.

How to access the emergency restart option

Emergency restart
Use at your own risk. Credit: World of OSes

If all is well with your Windows computer, you can of course click the Start menu button on the taskbar, then the power button on the right, and then Restart. But what if your computer has crashed and left you hanging, so you can't click anything? What if the situation is so bad that the Start menu has mysteriously disappeared?

Start with Ctrl+Alt+Del

To get to the emergency restart option, you need to first press the familiar Ctrl+Alt+Del keyboard shortcut, known by pretty much everyone who's ever had to fix a Windows PC at some point. This shortcut is designed to work even if your computer is otherwise unresponsive, and gives you access to options for locking your PC, signing out of your account, and bringing up the Task Manager.

But down in the lower right corner, there's also a power button: Click this, and you get the standard Sleep, Shut down, and Restart options. However, if you hold down Ctrl and then click the power button, that takes you to the emergency restart page, together with the warning about losing any unsaved data. Click OK, and your computer will reboot itself almost instantly.

If you can get to the screen after Ctrl+Alt+Del, then you'll want to try the normal restart option first—you'll only need to go down the holding Ctrl route if that doesn't work. Presumably, that will be because there's a program or a part of the Windows code that isn't shutting down properly to clear the way for a restart.

Should you need yet another way of restarting your computer without using the Start menu, you can do it from the command prompt or PowerShell utility, too: Just type "shutdown /r" and hit Enter. There are a host of extra flags you can add to that command if needed, including setting a timer for the restart and forcing applications to close: You can read full instructions here.

Having now familiarized myself with the emergency restart option in Windows, I'm off to find more features that I haven't come across—even though they've been around for years. Any suggestions are most welcome.

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This Tool Lets You Make Quick Photo Edits in Your Browser Without Uploading Anything

By: Justin Pot

Need to quickly edit a photo? MiNi PhotoEditor is a free and open source web application that lets you do basic image editing tasks in your browser, without having to upload your photos to a server somewhere. The application offers quick tools for cropping, lighting, and other adjustments, alongside Instagram-style filters. This is perfect if you ever need to quickly edit an image on a computer where you can't install photo editing software, such as a Chromebook or a work computer.

To get started, simply open the MiNi PhotoEditor website and drag an image onto it. In my tests, all images—even large ones—opened instantly, which makes sense, given that all editing happens locally on your computer. No need to wait for it to upload.

The editing interface is simple—your image is on the left, and the editing tools are arranged in boxes to the right (or below, if your window isn't wide enough to display them to the side). The top box allows you to rotate the image, crop it (by hand or to a given ratio) and even do some basic perspective shifting. Below that are boxes for adjusting the lighting levels and the color balance, which can be useful if the lighting wasn't quite right when you took the photo. There are also a few Instagram-style filters that can be applied with a click.

The image editor wiht a split bar in the middle, showing how the photo looked before and after changes.
Credit: Justin Pot

Feel free to make as many edits as you want—the original file isn't affected. You can click the Split button in the top-right corner to see the difference between the original image and the edited version. When you're done, click the Download button to save the image as either a JPEG or PNG file.

MiNi PhotoEditor is never going to replace a full-blown photo editor like Photoshop, granted, but it's completely free, it gives you a lot of the basics, and it's available on any device with a web browser.

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Windows Recall Is Back (but Should You Use It?)

By: David Nield

Originally launched by Microsoft last July, Windows Recall was swiftly pulled in response to a barrage of security and privacy complaints. Now it's back, with some tweaks to make it more palatable for users—but there remain plenty of concerns about what happens when it's enabled.

If you're new to the story, Recall is an AI-powered feature that acts like a memory for your computer. It regularly snaps and analyzes screenshots of whatever you're doing. It's handy if you want to get back to a document or message you vaguely remember from three weeks ago, while at the same time sounding several alarm bells in terms of having all your past Windows activity stored on your system.

I tested an early version of Windows Recall at the end of last year, and found it to be genuinely useful at times—for those prepared to put up with the security and privacy problems. Back then it was still in a rather unfinished form, with some basic features missing, such as the option to filter snapshots by app.

Windows Recall
Recall lets you search through captured images. Credit: Microsoft

To get Recall today, you need to have a Copilot+ PC, with all the necessary AI processing power: If you have a compatible computer with the latest version of Windows, you'll find the Recall app on the Start menu. It won't be enabled by default; making the feature opt-in is one of the changes Microsoft has made after the wave of criticism directed towards Recall when it was first unveiled.

Microsoft has made other changes, too. The data stored by Recall is now more securely encrypted; Windows Hello authentication is required each and every time you want to access it; and sensitive information such as passwords, credit card numbers, and official IDs are filtered out—though it remains to be seen how effectively that works.

Are the changes enough to win back trust for Windows Recall? It's certainly now much harder for someone else to get at the screenshots that Recall stores, but there remain questions about how well they're protected—not just on your own computer, but on the computers of anyone else you might be communicating with.

Recall still has problems

Security researcher Kevin Beaumont has been digging into the latest version of Recall, and there are still some worrying problems here. The first is that someone else can access your PC and Recall using your computer PIN, if they can guess it or trick you into revealing it: While biometric authentication is required to set Recall up, you can fall back to using a PIN whenever you need to see or search through the screenshots.

Now this isn't too different from someone hacking into your phone using your PIN, and you might be confident that no one else will even get hold of your set of digits. However, if they do, Recall gives these unauthorized visitors instant access to everything you've ever done on your PC since you set up the feature.

Secondly, Beaumont found that the sensitive data filtering is hit and miss (something I noticed in my own testing too): You can't really rely on it to wipe out details of your credit cards or your medical histories. That's not a huge issue if you're the only one looking at this information, but that's difficult to guarantee.

Windows Recall
Recall can be accessed via facial recognition—or a simple PIN. Credit: Microsoft

There's another problem here, highlighted by Ars Technica: If someone you know enables Recall, and is syncing photos and chats you've sent them to their computer, all that information then gets snapped and sorted on their PC (think Signal for Windows, for example). Your data is more likely to be exposed, and you've not even had any say in it.

It seems as though insisting on biometric authentication every time Recall is accessed is an obvious fix Microsoft could apply here—making it much harder for someone else to get at your data, whether it's on your PC or the PC of someone you know. It still feels wrong that your emails, photos, or chats might be getting collected together in someone else's Recall library, though.

More robust filtering tools would certainly help as well. Windows Recall already lets you exempt certain sites and apps from being screenshotted, but it's a rather clunky system, and better automatic censoring would be welcome. In the meantime, you not only need to decide if you're going to enable Recall, you need to check in with family and friends to see what they're doing as well.

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This Is the Best Free Weather App for Windows

By: Justin Pot

Windows doesn't come with a weather application the way macOS and mobile operating systems do. Sure, the widget area shows the weather, but it also summons news headlines from the very bowels of internet hell and requires that you open a web browser page full of ads to get more details.

If you want a clean, ad-free, and beautiful way to check the weather on Windows I recommend Lively Weather. This is a free and open source native-to-Windows application (by developer Dani John) with complete weather forecasts. It also features beautifully rendered background animations that reflect the current weather conditions.

You can search for any city on Earth to see the weather: Tthe main summary shows up at the top of the screen, and below that sits a seven-day overview alongside a timeline of conditions. There are also boxes for the UV index, sunrise and sunset, humidity, wind, air quality, pressure, visibility, cloud coverage, and total precipitation. Click any day in the seven-day overview and all of these boxes will populate with forecasted conditions. You can also click any box to see more details.

A timeline of relative humidity is shown above an explanation of how to interpret the data.
Credit: Justin Pot

This is, for me, more than enough information about the weather to make choices about my wardrobe and transportation. The only obvious thing missing is radar, which is admittedly a feature some people rely on.

You can choose between imperial and metric in the settings. You can also choose a weather provider: Open-Meteo, OpenWeatherMap, and Qweather (China) are all supported.

Finally, you can choose the quality of the visuals. It's recommended that you stick with lower if you don't have a dedicated GPU, which is an absurd sentence to type about a weather application. When you see the backgrounds, though, it makes sense. These are dynamic animations for conditions ranging from sun to rain to snow to lightning, all rendered behind the transparent boxes that offer the actual weather information.

It's pretty, is what I'm saying, and there are even ambient sounds reflecting the weather condition (though I might suggest opening your window instead).

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Microsoft Has a Fix for Windows’ Latest Blue Screen Problem

By: Emily Long

If your Windows computer is crashing unexpectedly and showing you a blue screen error, there's now a fix for that.

As BleepingComputer reports, Windows updates pushed in March and April are triggering a secure kernel fatal error, causing devices running Windows 11 version 24H2 to crash and display a blue screen exception with error code 0x18B, indicating a SECURE_KERNEL_ERROR.

To address this issue, Microsoft has released a Known Issue Rollback (KIR), which is a quick, targeted fix for non-security bugs. It's a temporary solution since it rolls back earlier updates, while the company works on a new update to patch the problem. Here's how to apply it to your device.

What Windows users need to do

If you have a personal or non-managed work computer running Windows 11, the resolution will automatically be pushed to your device from Windows Update and Microsoft Update in the next day or so. According to Microsoft's support page, restarting may help the fix apply faster. As such, make sure you reboot your PC in order for this latest update to take effect as soon as possible.

For enterprise devices managed by IT departments, the issue will resolve once your network admin installs and configures the Windows 11 24H2 and Windows Server 2025 KB5053656 250412_03103 Known Issue Rollback Group Policy. The Group Policy can be found under Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > . You will also need to restart any affected devices to apply the group policy settings.

The blue screen bug follows Microsoft's big Patch Tuesday update, which fixed 134 security vulnerabilities in Windows—including one actively-exploited zero-day flaw. It also comes as Microsoft is testing out a new blue screen design altogether. Soon enough, future crashes like this will look different, though the company's procedural response will likely remained unchanged.

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Kanri Is a Free, Offline Alternative to Trello

By: Justin Pot

If you like the Kanban method but have grown tired of using bloated, online-only tools, Kanri is a free open-source alternative you can install on Linux, macOS, and Windows that works entirely offline. It even supports importing from Trello.

We've recommended the Kanban method, and related tools, for tracking your work and visualizing projects. And there's nothing about Kanban that needs to be digital—it works well with sticky notes on a wall or even a notepad. Most people, however, depend on apps like Trello for the job—but Trello has a few limitations. There's no offline mode on the computer, for one thing, and the app has a habit of asking you to upgrade. If you'd prefer something simpler that works offline, Kanri might be what you're looking for.

To get started, simply download the application and open it. There's no need to create an account—you can just start using the application. You can make new boards and start adding cards. Click a card to view more details.

The pop-up for a task complete with a box for the description and a list of sub-tasks below.
Credit: Justin Pot

You can add a description, due date, tasks, and tags—that's it. There's no attachments or collaboration features, which is going to be a downside for some. There's also no cloud storage or syncing—everything lives on your local device. It is possible to export your board when it comes time to replace your computer; still, the lack of syncing means this application won't work for everyone.

On the other hand, if all you want is a quick Kanban application you can use on your computer, Kanri is just about perfect. It's fast and works without an internet connection, and there are no limits to the number of boards or cards you can add.

There are a few nice touches, too. You can set custom backgrounds for all of your boards, making it easy to tell them apart at a glance while also making things a bit more fun. And there's support in the settings for customizing the color scheme.

And another big feature is the ability to grab existing boards from Trello. You can import all of your Trello boards at once or any individual board—whatever you prefer. All columns and cards are grabbed, including the description, due dates, and any sub-tasks. What doesn't come along are attachments and activities, mostly because Kanri doesn't support those features.

Even so, I bet Kanri supports most of what people use more feature-rich (and expensive) Kanban applications for. Give it a shot if you're looking for something simpler.

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Don't Delete This Empty Folder on Windows 11

By: Emily Long

It can be alarming to find an unknown folder or file on your computer, not least because malware can install temporary files without your knowledge that allow an infection to hide or spread. If you're a Windows 11 users, the empty "inetpub" that recently appeared on your computer isn't malicious—and it's actually critical to patching a security flaw in your system.

The folder, spotted last week by Windows Latest, was created on users' devices during the most recent Window 11 Patch Tuesday update. It is part of a security fix for an elevation of privilege vulnerability (labeled CVE-2025-21204) in the Windows Update Stack that allows attackers access to modify system files or folders, though Windows Latest reports that Microsoft hasn't clarified exactly how the folder is related to the patch other than offering "increased protection."

If you find the inetpub folder on your device, do not delete it. If you already have, do not despair—you can recover it to ensure the vulnerability is patched.

How to recover a deleted "inetpub" folder on Windows 11

If you accidentally deleted the empty inetpub folder on your computer running Windows 11, you need to restore it for the security patch to be effective. While you can normally recover deleted files and folders from the Recycle Bin, File History, or a backup (or using recovery software), there is a specific process to restore the inetpub folder as described by Windows Latest:

  1. Go to Control Panel > Programs > Programs and Features.

  2. Click Turn Windows features on or off to pull up a dialog box.

  3. Check the box next to Internet Information Services and click OK.

This will recreate the deleted folder with the same security protections as the original.

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This App Can Change Where Your macOS Notifications Pop Up

By: Justin Pot

Notifications on the Mac show up in the top-right corner as a rule. This is fine most of the time, but on large displays you might not notice what's happening in the top-right corner if you're reading a document on the left side of the screen. Wouldn't the notifications be better in the middle, the way they show up on the iPhone and iPad?

PingPlace is a free Mac application that will move your notifications to other corners or even the top center of your screen. The application lives in the menu bar and lets you choose between the four corners of the display along with the top and bottom middle.

Setting the application up is easy: Just download it, drag it to your Applications folder, then launch. You will be asked to enable accessibility permissions for the application, which is common for this sort of customization app. After that, you can choose where you want your notifications to show up by clicking the menu bar icon.

The menu bar icon for PingPlace.
Credit: Justin Pot

This worked for me, though not without a few oddities. When I set notifications to the center, for example, the widget area also moved to the center. Some people might actually prefer this, granted, but I like having my widgets area on the right side of the screen.

The application, by default, does not start when your Mac does—you can change this by checking the "Launch at Login" button in the settings. And that's about it in terms of options.

This isn't the only application that makes working with notifications easier—there's also an app that dismisses notifications using a keyboard shortcut. Hopefully a future version of macOS will make apps like this unnecessary.

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