Please refer to below video, everything has been explained very quickly.
1. Having Issues with your computer? Use the Reliability Monitor
The Reliability Monitor allows you to see a graph of your system’s “stability
index” over a period of days, weeks, months, and up to even a year. It is then
rated on a scale of 1 to 10, 1 is not reliable at all and 10 being super
reliable, and shows you the specific programs that are causing issues or
crashing over a specific period of time.How?
Search for “reliability” in the Start Menu Search and run View Reliability
History 2. The calculatoron windows is as old as time. Anyways,
the Windows 7 calculator actually has a few extra useful tools like unit
conversions, (weight, temperature, area etc) and cool worksheets to help you
calculate a car’s fuel mileage or a mortgage payment. 3 . GodMode
This hidden egg will conveniently put hundreds of settings from all over
the os into one place.
How?Create a new folder on your desktop and name it GodMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}270
items will automatically be added to the folder consisting of every
configurable option in Windows 7. 4. Problem Steps RecorderWhen
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
6. It’s a Global Village.If you’ve tried to change your desktop wallpaper,
you’ve probably noticed that there’s a set of wallpapers there that match
the locale you selected when you installed Windows. (If you picked US,
you’ll see beautiful views of Crater Lake in Oregon, the Arches National
Park, a beach in Hawai’i, etc.) In fact, there are several sets of themed
wallpapers installed based on the language you choose, but the others are
in a hidden directory. If you’re feeling in an international mood, simply
browse toC:\Windows\Globalization\MCT and you’ll see a series of pictures under the Wallpaper
directory for each country. Just double-click on the theme file in the
Theme directory to display a rotation through all the pictures for that
country. (Note that some countries contain a generic set of placeholder
art for now.)
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