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What is the Power User Menu

What is the power user menu: In Windows 8, Microsoft introduced a feature for mouse users which can be accessed with a right-click on the bottom left corner of the screen, the Win+X menu. In Windows 8.1 and Windows 10, you can simply right-click on the Start button to show it. Although this menu is far from being a Start Menu replacement, it does have shortcuts to useful administrative tools and system functions. The Power User Menu is often also referred to as the Windows Tools Menu, Power User Task Menu, Power User Hotkey, WinX Menu, or the WIN+X Menu. In this article you will get the knowledge of how to open power user menu, features and functions in the power user menu and also how to customize this menu in Windows 10.

Power User Menu or WIN+X Menu
Power User Menu or WIN+X Menu

This guide will give you an overview of the power user menu in an efficient way.

Continue reading to know more about the power user menu.

Learn:

1. How to Open the Power User Menu or WIN+X Menu

To access the Win + X menu in Windows 10, you have two options:

Method 1. Right click the Start button. Instead of the context menu of the taskbar, Windows 10 shows the Win + X menu.

Right click the Start button on Windows10
Right click the Start button on Windows10

Method 2. Or, press Win + X shortcut keys on the keyboard

using Windows + X shortcut keys on the keyboard
using Windows + X shortcut keys on the keyboard

2. Features and Functions in the Power User Menu or Win+X Menu:

By default, Windows 10 has the following items in the Win+X menu,

Programs and Features – allows you to uninstall software.

Power options – opens the power plan and related settings.

Event viewer – shows the complete list of events on your PC.

System – shows the system properties window.

Device Manager – allows managing device and driver settings.

Network Connections – opens the list of network adapters.

Disk Management – allows you to manage partitions and hard drives.

Computer Management – opens a set of various administrative settings, including Disk Management and Event Viewer mentioned above.

Command Prompt – opens a new command prompt instance.

Command Prompt (Admin) – opens a new elevated command prompt instance.

Task Manager – opens the Task Manager. See this article for more information.

Control Panel – opens the Control Panel.

File Explorer – opens the File Manager

Search – launches the Search app.

Run – opens the Run dialog.

The shutdown options menu – shows a submenu with Sign out, Reboot and Shutdown.

Desktop – minimizes all opened windows and shows Desktop.

3. Replace the command prompt with PowerShell in Win+X Menu

If you prefer to work with PowerShell instead of the command prompt, you can put PowerShell shortcuts instead of the command prompt using the Taskbar settings. Right-click the taskbar, open Taskbar settings, and go to the Windows Settings Taskbar option.

Taskbar settings
Taskbar settings

Click on the option box to Replace Command Prompt with Windows PowerShell in the menu when I right-click the start button or press Windows key+X :

Replace the command prompt with PowerShell in Win+X Menu
Replace the command prompt with PowerShell in Win+X Menu

4. Customize the Win + X menu in Windows 10

The Win+X menu entries actually are all shortcut files (.LNK) but customizing the Win+X menu is no easy task because Microsoft intentionally made it harder to customize probably to prevent third-party apps from abusing it and putting their own shortcuts there. The shortcuts are all special – they are passed through a Windows API hashing function and the hash is then stored inside those shortcuts. Its presence tells the Win+X menu that the shortcut is special and only then it will show up in the menu, otherwise, it will be ignored.

Method 1. Download Win+X Menu Editor

To customize the Power user menu, you can use Win + X Menu editor app. Win+X Menu Editor is a free tool with an easy-to-use GUI to let you customize the Win+X menu. It does not patch any system files to disable the hash check. Using it, you can add or remove shortcuts to the Win+X menu, change their names and order.

Win+X Menu Editor
Win+X Menu Editor
  1. Download Win+X Menu Editor from here.
  2. The UI is pretty self-explanatory. You can add any program. It has presets for common system tools. You can organize shortcuts in groups and reorder them.
  3. When you are done editing the menu inside it, click the Restart Explorer button to save changes and restart Explorer.exe.

In this screenshot, you can see a link to Win+X Menu Editor itself added to this menu.

Win+X Menu Editor in Power User Menu
Win+X Menu Editor in Power User Menu

Method 2. Manually rearranging shortcuts

The Win + X menu can be customized by rearranging or removing shortcuts within the various Group folders contained within this directory:

C:\Users\[USERNAME]\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\WinX

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE is the hive in the Windows Registry where you’ll find the registry keys associated with the Power User Menu shortcuts. The exact location is:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\ShellCompatibility\InboxApp

Wrapping things up:

How’s your experience after following these tips and tricks?. Hope you have learned much more about the “power user menu”. Please let us know using comments below, also like and share this guide to help others.
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Note: If you have any kind of Windows operating system related issue you can try this Windows Repair tool, click here…

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