
Now since the Windows 8 Release Preview is online for you to try it out, most of you will be delighted with the welcoming user interface of the built-in Metro UI. However, the tiled front–end, which is basically built keeping a touchscreen monitor in mind can be very irritating when used with a conventional mouse. Just imagine swiping the initial screen upwards with your mouse and subsequently typing in your password to log in, and later looking at the whole desktop flooded with tiles and apps—though it may look nice for a while, it tends to get frustrating after a bit, because you are so used to the old–styled desktop interface from Windows 95, all the way until Windows 7.
In this workshop, we shall show you how you can disable and re-enable the Metro UI with ease. All it takes is a simple tweaking utility to get it done, and you are back in force using your old mouse on a Windows 7 styled UI. In order to get rid of the Metro UI, you will need a utility, called ‘Windows Eight Metro UI Switcher’, which can be downloaded from SuperUtils.com. The utility is less than a megabyte in size and is in a portable form. This tiny utility allows you to disable the Start Screen of Windows 8 and get back to your old-school Windows 7 styled Start menu. It also helps getting back the classic Task Manager that displays the processor utilization.
Step 1
For those who do not want to use the utility and do it manually, you can do it using two other methods. The first method is by tweaking a single registry key. Start the registry editor and scroll down to ‘HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer’. On the right side, you will find the string ‘RPEnabled’ and change it from the value ‘1’ to ‘0’. Close the registry editor and restart the PC. To enable it again, simply revert back the value to ‘1’.
Step 2
No comments:
Post a Comment