Windows 10: The best hidden features, tips, and tricks
After using Windows 10 for almost a week, I’ve discovered some
neat little changes and features that Microsoft hasn’t yet discussed —
smart tweaks that, if you’re a mouse-and-keyboard user looking for a
reason to upgrade from Windows 7, you will be very pleased with. Let’s
dive straight in with my favorite secret/hidden features of Windows 10.
Explorer now has a “Home” tab
In
the last few versions of Windows, opening My Computer or a new Explorer
window would show you your computer’s various storage locations and
shortcuts to default folders like Documents and My Pictures. In Windows 10,
you now end up in a new view called Home, which shows Favorites,
Frequent Folders, and Recent Files. Take a look at the screenshot below
and you’ll see what I mean.

Windows 10, Explorer’s new Home tab
Favorites
seems to be where Documents or My Pictures should appear. I don’t know
the math behind the Frequent Folders, but it looks like it just tracks
which folders I’ve opened the most times. Recent Files is like the
Recent Places feature that premiered in Windows Vista, but just for
files.
I assume that folders can be added to the Favorites
section, but I haven’t yet worked out how to do it. (To be honest, the
more advanced features of Explorer, like Libraries, are still pretty
hard to penetrate.)
“This PC” is still available from the
left-hand menu if you want to manage your various storage
locations/default folders. I like the new Home tab a lot.

You can finally put the Recycle Bin on the taskbar
Rather
than having to poke around Explorer or minimize everything and find the
Recycle Bin icon on the Desktop, in Windows 10 you can now add the
Recycle Bin to both the taskbar and the Start menu. Yes, that is the
sound of many brains exploding as they catastrophically realize
the enormity of this change.

Windows 10, resized Start menu
The Windows 10 Start menu is resizable
This
one is a bit odd: You can make the Windows 10 Start menu as tall or as
wide as you like. If you want to have a Start menu that takes up the
entire left side of your screen, or a narrow strip across the taskbar,
then that’s now possible. The taskbar itself is also resizable, which
means you can do weird stuff like this:

Windows 10, resized Start menu and taskbar. Could you do this in Windows 7 or 8…?
I’m not sure if this is second bit is intentional or not. A resizable Start menu is quite cool, though!

Cortana is almost definitely coming to Windows 10
After a little bit of poking around (searching for “Cortana” in Explorer) I found a lot of references to Cortana in Windows 10 Technical Preview; there’s even a Windows.Cortana.dll
, just sitting there in the System32 directory.
You also get a bunch of Cortana-related hits if you search for “Cortana” within the Registry Editor.
None
of this is to say that Cortana is definitely coming to Windows 10 —
there are lots of other reasons for those files/registry entries being
there, such as the ghost of an early internal test — but I’d say it’s
pretty likely. We should hopefully see Cortana in the next beta of
Windows 10.

Windows 10 notifications/toasts, in the top right corner

Windows 10 notifications/toasts, in the top right corner
Notifications and toasts in Windows 10
While
Windows 10’s rumored Notification Tray isn’t yet in the Technical
Preview, there are some new pretty toasts/notifications that pop up in
the top right corner of the screen. These notifications appear to
replace the speech bubbles that used to pop out of the system tray (the
bottom right corner of the taskbar, unless you’re one of those heathens
who has moved the taskbar to a non-standard location). You can see two
example notifications in the images above, but there are similar toasts
for successful uploads to Dropbox and similar activities.
As far
as I can tell, these notifications/toasts are configured through the
same interface that Metro notifications used in Windows 8/8.1 — i.e. in
PC Settings (see below). It seems desktop apps like VLC and the Adobe
Creative Cloud manager/updater were automatically added to the list of
apps that are allowed to pop up notifications.

It’s
entirely possible that this is all the Desktop interface is going to
get, in terms of notifications. The new Notification Tray might only be
coming to the Metro interface.