Tuesday, June 7, 2022

Speed up windows. 

1. Windows 10 Experience score

  • CMD
  • winsat formal -restart
  • powershell /c Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_WinSAT


2. "Graphics Settings" Turn on "Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling.

3. SystemPropertiesAdvanced

Right-click on the Start button and click on Run > type SystemPropertiesAdvanced in Run Command window and click on OK.

sysdm.cpl >Advances > Performance turn off everything except Show shadows under windows Smooth edge screen fonts.

4. Enable  Game Mode for inventor



If you’re a serious gamer, you probably know all about Game Mode, which optimizes your PC for playing games. That’s great for when you’re doing just that, but it can slow down your system when you’re not playing because it multitasks with lots of processes running in the background. So turning off Game Mode can give your PC a quick boost. (You can always turn it back on again when you want to play a game.)

Game Mode is turned on by default, so even if you’ve never played a game on your PC, it’s probably enabled. To turn it off, go to Settings > Gaming > Game Mode and move the Game Mode slider to Off. After you do that, click the Xbox Game Bar category on the left hand side of the screen, and on the screen you come to, turn the slider at the top of the screen to Off.

4. Disable transparency

In addition to turning off shadows, animations and visual effects, you should also disable the transparency effects that Windows 10 uses for the Start menu, the Taskbar and the Action Center. It takes a surprising amount of work for Windows to create these transparency effects, and turning them off can make a difference in system performance.

To do it, from Settings, choose Personalization > Colors, scroll down to “Transparency effects” and move the slider to Off.