We’ve featured programs that close down non-essential Windows apps before, as well as ways to kill those regularly problematic apps. If you’d rather not install extra software, though, here’s a way to create your own desktop shortcut to kill all running apps. More »
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Create a Shortcut that Quits Every Running Windows Program [Shortcuts]
The Windows 8 Concept Desktop [Featured Desktop]
Reader Saad Baig’s desktop shows what a Windows desktop could look like if you made the Windows 7 Superbar really “super”, by adding desktop widgets directly into the taskbar, easily accessible even with maximized applications. More »
The Mac-Like Windows Desktop [Featured Desktop]
Reader Mango Sango’s Windows desktop pulls together a bunch of system customization applications that completely transform the interface into something more Mac-like, but still unique and impressive to look at.
The desktop is a combination of:
- ObjectBar | Mod of Gaia09 by Sinedrock
- Rocketdock | Mod of Gaia09 by RequestedRerun
- Icons | Gaia07 by Imrik and Adobe CS4 by pkarwowski
- Windowblinds | Mod of Gaia07 by SKYNetX
- Styler Toolbar | Mild by jordanfc
- Prism | Buzz Graphics
- Wallpaper | from Snow Leopard stock
- 3RVX | Volume control
- CD Art Display | Personal skin
- Media Player Classic | Personal image
- Windows Picture and Fax | from Sound of Color by SwaySo
- Findexer
This desktop not your style? Why waste time complaining? Instead, get started creating your own killer desktop with the easy-install Rainmeter 1.1 package and show the world what you can do. If you get stuck and need some help, join up with the Lifehacker Desktop Customization Google Group to collaborate on new ideas for desktop configurations.
Once you’ve created your own beautifully tweaked (and hopefully productive) desktop, post it over in the Lifehacker Desktop Show and Tell Flickr Group complete with a description of the programs and tweaks you used (and preferably links as well!), and we just might feature it here.
The Million Years of LiteStep Desktop [Featured Desktop]
Reader nitzua’s Windows XP desktop completely customizes the interface without cluttering up the desktop with gadgets you might never see—moving launchers into the context menu using the LiteStep alternate shell environment.
The desktop is a combination of:
- Visual Style – Windows Classic, with a 3dcc by me.
- Icons – Gnome from the tango patcher
- Wallpaper – ‘renew’ from the nature details pack
- Litestep – blend of zero by jive (kareem) and a theme he started for me based on this mockup
- Firefox – Tiny Menu, Titlebartweaks, custom userchrome.css, custom theme
- Start page – my mod of twelve by noka
- Applications – Zeed image viewer (reshacked), Pidgin, Mirc, Y’z shadow, Qttabbar
- Font – Lucida Grande
Impressive job, nitzua!
This desktop not your style? Why waste time complaining? Instead, get started creating your own killer desktop with the easy-install Rainmeter 1.0 package and show the world what you can do. If you get stuck and need some help, join up with the Lifehacker Desktop Customization Google Group to collaborate on new ideas for desktop configurations.
Once you’ve created your own beautifully tweaked (and hopefully productive) desktop, post it over in the Lifehacker Desktop Show and Tell Flickr Group complete with a description of the programs and tweaks you used (and preferably links as well!), and we just might feature it here.
Process Hacker is a Powerful Task Manager Clone [Downloads]
Windows only: System information utility Process Hacker is an open-source, portable task manager clone with loads of powerful features.
While Process Hacker is meant to look and work a little more like the built-in Task Manager, being easy to approach for regular users, it actually has many of the same features as the popular and powerful Process Explorer that we all know and love.
Along with the normal features one would expect from a process manager utility, you can add or delete services, read and write process data memory in a hex editor, search through memory with a regex, inject DLLs into running processes, and pretty much every other feature you can imagine. Process Hacker is free and open source, available for Windows only.


It's the little things that make a Windows system great—like utilities that use less than 10MB of memory to make your life easier. Here are 10 apps that pack a lot of greatness into very little space.
You don’t open your programs in the order you want them nealy arranged on your taskbar, you open them when you need them. Taskbar Shuffle knows this, and makes it easy to quickly swap windows around, along with system tray icons. It also allows you to close out windows with a simple middle-click, which alone could make it worth the roughly 6MB price of admission. You won’t know you wanted to fling windows out of your cursor’s way until you try it.
It’s probably smaller than your desktop wallpaper. But Everything is more useful and efficient than applications 25x its size. Everything only searches through file names, not inside the contents of them, but it does so stupid-fast as you type. You’ll usually find your file with a few keystrokes, and Google fans will appreciate the boolean operators that enable and/or elegance. Definitely an app you’ll want to right-click and create a keyboard shortcut for. There’s also
If you’re rocking dual, triple, or even quadruple monitors at home or at the office (and, let us just say, lucky you on that last bit), these apps have a relatively small system footprint, but make a big impact in how your system looks. They both manage separate or split wallpapers across multiple monitors, and can grab and rotate images from your computer, Flickr, or other sources. With DisplayFusion’s
I know, it's like we never give up on promoting this, right? Well, what can we say—we (the royal "we," really) wrote it because it filled a need in our half-breed lives of alternating text and HTML. Turns out, though, that folks ranging from power emailers to military writers have found dull, boring text they can automate, misspelled words to catch on the fly, or perhaps powerful, seriously secretive acronyms they'd occasionally like to spell out. For less than 2.5MB of RAM on most systems, this one packs a pretty hefty punch.
In a magical world without computer stress, we’re all running virtual machines to try out software we might not want, and we simply uninstall it there, keeping one system nearly pristine. For the real world, Revo Uninstaller scrubs an application and all its traces off your Windows system. It can also turn off programs that are starting up with Windows, and uninstall applications with a crosshair “Hunter Mode” that doesn’t require you to know what it’s named.
Nir Sofer has contributed a wealth of
With good reason, this tiny, powerful little app has remained our readers’
Windows Task Manager isn’t a bad tool, necessarily, but it only gives you a layman’s view of what’s eating up memory or pulling serious CPU cycles. Process Explorer expands on the vagueries of “rundll” or “svchost” with a double-click, links background services to applications, and points to the folders they come from. You might not need it all the time, but when you’re rooting around and trying to
There are a lot of good reasons to keep on rockin' Windows XP, but some of the built-in utilities can feel a bit, well, dated—and that goes for a good number of Vista tools, tool. Notepads without tabs? A Paint app that can't really resize or undo more than one action? Skip the headaches and work-arounds and run down our list of
If you feel like you’ve heard this one before without really knowing why, you probably saw it listed as the