If you are a long-time Windows user, you may remember a trick to enable 'Windows Master Control Panel'. It may sound epic depending on your expectations, but the easiest way to describe the feature is that it gives access to all of the operating system's control panels from within a single folder.
As it turns out, you can enable "Windows Master Control Panel" in Windows 10 as well. Why would you need it? The feature is useful for those in IT, those who manage a computer, and obviously for those advanced enthusiasts
Enable "Windows Master Control Panel" in Windows 10
Make sure your system account has administrative privileges
Right-click on the Windows 10 desktop and choose New > Folder
Name the folder: Windows Master Control Panel.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} and hit enter/return to make it stick.
You can actually name the folder anything you want like NinjaCat mode. Simply replace 'Windows Master Control Panel' before the {....} characters to your liking.
That's it. Now when you open that folder, you can see around 40 different settings, including Devices and Printers, Credential Manager, Indexing, etc. Some variations exist depending if you have a Home or Pro version and different hardware.
Source : windowscentral
As it turns out, you can enable "Windows Master Control Panel" in Windows 10 as well. Why would you need it? The feature is useful for those in IT, those who manage a computer, and obviously for those advanced enthusiasts
Make sure your system account has administrative privileges
Right-click on the Windows 10 desktop and choose New > Folder
Name the folder: Windows Master Control Panel.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} and hit enter/return to make it stick.
You can actually name the folder anything you want like NinjaCat mode. Simply replace 'Windows Master Control Panel' before the {....} characters to your liking.
That's it. Now when you open that folder, you can see around 40 different settings, including Devices and Printers, Credential Manager, Indexing, etc. Some variations exist depending if you have a Home or Pro version and different hardware.
Source : windowscentral
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