If you were upset about all the productivity-sucking,
user-unfriendly features of Windows 8.1, take
heart. Microsoft has heard your cries and responded (sort of). This
articles will teach you how to go about fixing these annoyances..
Windows
8.1 is generally an improvement on Windows
8 . For a start, you get the Start button back and SkyDrive is
integrated so files sync from the cloud, even on Windows
RT. Microsoft has already come out with fixes for some of the early
problems we've seen, such as mouse lag in certain games, so make sure you're up
to date on Windows Update.
If you see issues with Wi-Fi, check for updated drivers from
your PC maker. Also, many registry checkers cause problems for the Windows 8.1
search service, so try turning those off.
But there are some annoying changes that you can fix
yourself – such as libraries that no longer show up in Explorer, or the
shortcut that used to open the snipping tool being reassigned to search, for
example.
Not only that, there are some tweaks we think make Windows
8.1 more usable. Here's what we're doing to all our new Windows 8.1 systems to
get them running smoothly.
1. Fix
SkyDrive
One of the most annoying issues with Windows 8.1 is when the
newly integrated SkyDrive won't sync files. Often, that's because you have a
lot of files trying to sync and your PC is hibernating or going to sleep before
it's done. When you turn your PC back on, SkyDrive sync spends so long
rebuilding the sync list that it doesn't get through all the files before
you're turning off your PC again – with all the new files you created only
making the backlog worse.
Simply Open File Explorer on the desktop, then right-click on the
SkyDrive icon and Select “Make available offline”
OR
Open the SkyDrive app and wait a couple of minutes and you should
see the total numbers of files that need to upload and download. Tap the
numbers to see a list of files with sync progress bars. Create a power profile
that doesn't turn your PC off after a set time, switch to that and leave your
PC plugged in overnight, and SkyDrive should plough through all the files. If
there are files causing problems, they'll be listed here as well, so you can
find and fix them.
2. Get
compatibility view back in IE
IE 11 includes a lot more web standards than before, but
many sites still relegate all versions of IE to specially written pages
designed for older, less standard versions. If a page didn't look right in IE
10, you could click the blue Compatibility icon in the address bar to load it
in as if you were using one of those old browsers. You don't see that icon for
most sites in IE 11 because it now only appears if a site is listed by
Microsoft as having compatibility problems.
Fortunately, you can add individual sites to the list
yourself. Click
the Settings cog next to the tabs and choose Compatibility View settings. The
current site will be highlighted. Click Add to put it on the list and you'll
see the button again. Alternatively, press F12 and use the Document mode
dropdown to make IE pretend to be a range of different browsers, which can fix
sites Compatibility View doesn't.
3.
Trust this PC
Until your PC is marked in your Microsoft account as
'trusted' it won't sync Wi-Fi passwords, website logins and other useful but
sensitive information. Usually it's entrusted during setup (or when you add a
new user account) by typing in a code Microsoft emails or texts to you. If you
skip that step you can still use your PC, but secure details won't sync.
Microsoft
will also stop trusting any devices you don't use for two months. Turn that
back on in PC Settings, Accounts. Under Your account, choose 'More account
settings online'. This loads the browser and asks you to sign in to your
Microsoft account. Select the check box that says 'I sign in frequently on this
device. Don't ask me for a code.'
You'll
get a code by email, text message or whatever method you've chosen for
authentication. Once you type that in, your PC will be trusted and will sync
secure information. If you haven't already set up any trusted devices, look on
the Password and security info page and choose Edit security info to pick how
to authenticate new devices first.
4. Get
all the apps on your Start screen to install
When you upgrade to Windows 8.1 you'll see tiles for all the
apps you had installed (and if you pick the Start screen layout from another
Windows 8.1 PC you'll see the tiles for all the apps you had installed on that
PC). That doesn't mean you actually have those apps though. Look carefully and
you'll see an arrow in the corner of some tiles, or if they're on the All Apps
screen they'll say 'install' under the app name.
You have a placeholder for the app, not the app itself. Just tap the
tile and Windows 8.1 will install the app from the Store for you. If you have a
lot of apps that need installing, go to the Store and pick My Apps from the app
bar to get them all at once. If you're using Avast anti-virus, this can cause
problems with apps installing. Remove the shortcuts to the problem apps in the
users/user/appdata/local/microsoft/windows/applicationshortcuts folder.
5. Get
rid of the pop-up tips
The first time you start using Windows Store apps you'll see
pop up tips teaching you how to open the Charms bar and switch between apps.
Annoyingly, you'll keep seeing them unless you follow their instructions at
least once. If you don't have a touch screen, use your mouse to do what the tip
is suggesting. After you've done it once, you won't see the tip again.
6. Put
libraries back
You don't have to keep your photos, music and videos where
Windows suggests. You might have them on an external drive, on SkyDrive or on
another PC. Adding the folders you use to the libraries in Windows means you
get to choose where files live, but you can still find them quickly, especially
in Store apps. But Windows 8.1 hides Libraries in Explorer. To put them back in
the navigation pane, open the View tab on the ribbon and choose Options, Change
folder and search options, then put a tick next to Show libraries.
7. Fix
file associations
You don't have to open pictures in the Photos app or music
in the Xbox Music app. If you missed the notification letting you pick which
program to use the first time you opened a file, go to Explorer and select a file you want to
change the default for. Click the arrow next to the Open button and pick
'Choose default program…' to change to the software you want to use.
8. Put
desktop IE back on the Start screen
The tile for the desktop version of IE is gone from the
Windows 8.1 Start screen. You can't put it back so if you don't want to click
the desktop tile and then open IE from the taskbar, you have to make desktop IE
the default and then the tile for the modern version of IE launches the desktop
browser instead. Click
the Settings cog in desktop IE, choose Internet Options > Programs and put a
tick next to 'Open Internet Explorer tiles on the desktop'.
9. See
more tiles
Perhaps because of the 8-inch tablets Microsoft is pushing
this year, the default in Windows 8.1 puts only a few, larger tiles on the
Start screen. Open
the Settings charm, choose Tiles and you can make the tiles smaller so you see
more of them. You can also add the Windows admin tools like Event Viewer to the
'All apps' list here.
10.
Squeeze in more text and apps
If you have a large, high resolution screen, you might want
the high DPI that's the default setting in Windows 8.1. Alternatively, you
might want to have smaller text and see more information at once – more
messages in Mail, more of a web page on screen, and so on.
In PC Settings choose PC and Devices > Display (or open the
Search charm and search for 'size'). The dropdown under 'More options' lets you
change the size of apps and text from Default to Smaller, which puts yet more
tiles on the Start screen and makes text smaller in your apps. It also lets you
snap three apps side by side on a Surface 2 screen rather than just two (or
four on a larger screen). If that makes desktop programs look too small, you
can change the DPI there separately. Right-click on the desktop and choose
'Screen resolution' then 'Make text and other items smaller or larger'. You can
drag the scale between Smaller and Larger or check 'Let me chose one scaling
level for all my displays' to see the options as radio buttons instead.
11.
Create an Admin Account
When you set up Windows 8.1 it guides you through signing in
with a Microsoft account or making a local account. Signing in with a Microsoft
account gets you all the handy settings synced, but it means you don't get the
choice of creating an admin account - and there are still plenty of times you
need to be an admin in Windows. Open the control panel and pick 'Change account type' under
User Account and Family Safety, select your own account and choose 'Change the
account type', then pick Administrator.
12. Use
Bing images as your lock screen
The Windows 8 Bing app is gone in Windows 8.1 and with it
the option to see the Bing daily image as your lock screen. But you can still
do it with a third-party app like Image
of the Day.
13.
Update Office to get snipping back
Windows 8.1 uses the Windows-S shortcut for the Search pane
instead of the Snipping tool (a handy way of grabbing a section of the screen)
and doesn't give it another keyboard shortcut. You have to find the Snipping
tool in Explorer, Right-click and choose Properties and open the Shortcut tab to add your
own keyboard shortcut (using Ctrl-Alt).
If you have Office 2013 installed (including the free version in
Windows RT) which uses OneNote's snipping tool, make sure you've applied all
the updates and you get the Windows-Shift-S shortcut for snipping.
14. Fix
disappearing USB drives
Windows 8.1 powers down USB drives when you're not using
them to save your battery (keeping the USB port live uses power on your PC).
USB drives are supposed to turn themselves back on automatically when you want
to use them, but it turns out quite a lot of drives don't manage that.
Check the list here and
if your drive is named there, try upgrading the firmware. If that doesn't help,
find the drive details in Device Manager and use those to add a key to its
settings in the Registry that stops Windows turning it off (there are full
instructions at the link above).
15. Put
remote pictures back in the Photos app
The Windows 8 Photos app showed pictures from Flickr,
Facebook, SkyDrive and your other Windows 8 PCs as well as local images. The
Windows 8.1 version defaults to just showing the pictures on your PC and you
can't add the online images back. However, if you include the picture folders
on networked PCs in the Pictures library (using Explorer) you'll see those
images in the Photos app, as long as those PCs are turned on and running a
version of Windows that has the search indexer. This means you can see photos
on a Windows 8 PC but not on a NAS. Open Explorer, select the folder you want to include in the
Network section and click Easy access in the ribbon, then choose Include in
library, Pictures.
Great post Teslim...pls how can i access skydrive files offlines??
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your comment @kayorday...check out this link for how to access skydrive files offline - http://tescoideas.blogspot.com/2013/12/how-to-access-skydrive-files-offline.html
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