How to remove all the tiles in the Windows 10 start menu?
up vote
17
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A common problem I have is that I have a new PC that I'll be using for a while. And pretty much every Windows 10 PC I've used (even work PCs) have a ton of junk I don't want in the start menu in the form of a tile. I don't care much about the stuff in the "all apps" menu because it's out of the way, but I want the tiles to be just for stuff I use a lot.
Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, the only way to remove tiles is one by one by right clicking > unpin from start. How can I quickly remove all these tiles?
Also, is there some easy way to copy over the start menu links and layout from another computer? This would be useful as I have a number of programs that I always want in the start menu no matter what PC I'm using.
windows-10 start-menu live-tiles
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
A common problem I have is that I have a new PC that I'll be using for a while. And pretty much every Windows 10 PC I've used (even work PCs) have a ton of junk I don't want in the start menu in the form of a tile. I don't care much about the stuff in the "all apps" menu because it's out of the way, but I want the tiles to be just for stuff I use a lot.
Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, the only way to remove tiles is one by one by right clicking > unpin from start. How can I quickly remove all these tiles?
Also, is there some easy way to copy over the start menu links and layout from another computer? This would be useful as I have a number of programs that I always want in the start menu no matter what PC I'm using.
windows-10 start-menu live-tiles
1
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy provides this capability. If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy. You can use this link to learn more about this method: technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/… - If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
– InterLinked
Apr 26 '16 at 19:56
1
I had the same question last month when I had 7 computers to configure the same. Wish @lnterLinked had seen it. That would have been a great tool.
– CharlieRB
Apr 26 '16 at 20:26
@InterLinked - you ought to flesh that out and post that as an answer.
– Journeyman Geek♦
Jan 18 '17 at 12:50
add a comment |
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
A common problem I have is that I have a new PC that I'll be using for a while. And pretty much every Windows 10 PC I've used (even work PCs) have a ton of junk I don't want in the start menu in the form of a tile. I don't care much about the stuff in the "all apps" menu because it's out of the way, but I want the tiles to be just for stuff I use a lot.
Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, the only way to remove tiles is one by one by right clicking > unpin from start. How can I quickly remove all these tiles?
Also, is there some easy way to copy over the start menu links and layout from another computer? This would be useful as I have a number of programs that I always want in the start menu no matter what PC I'm using.
windows-10 start-menu live-tiles
A common problem I have is that I have a new PC that I'll be using for a while. And pretty much every Windows 10 PC I've used (even work PCs) have a ton of junk I don't want in the start menu in the form of a tile. I don't care much about the stuff in the "all apps" menu because it's out of the way, but I want the tiles to be just for stuff I use a lot.
Unfortunately, as far as I can tell, the only way to remove tiles is one by one by right clicking > unpin from start. How can I quickly remove all these tiles?
Also, is there some easy way to copy over the start menu links and layout from another computer? This would be useful as I have a number of programs that I always want in the start menu no matter what PC I'm using.
windows-10 start-menu live-tiles
windows-10 start-menu live-tiles
edited Jul 27 '17 at 21:04
Steven M. Vascellaro
4,146144690
4,146144690
asked Apr 22 '16 at 4:43
Kat
3311216
3311216
1
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy provides this capability. If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy. You can use this link to learn more about this method: technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/… - If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
– InterLinked
Apr 26 '16 at 19:56
1
I had the same question last month when I had 7 computers to configure the same. Wish @lnterLinked had seen it. That would have been a great tool.
– CharlieRB
Apr 26 '16 at 20:26
@InterLinked - you ought to flesh that out and post that as an answer.
– Journeyman Geek♦
Jan 18 '17 at 12:50
add a comment |
1
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy provides this capability. If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy. You can use this link to learn more about this method: technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/… - If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
– InterLinked
Apr 26 '16 at 19:56
1
I had the same question last month when I had 7 computers to configure the same. Wish @lnterLinked had seen it. That would have been a great tool.
– CharlieRB
Apr 26 '16 at 20:26
@InterLinked - you ought to flesh that out and post that as an answer.
– Journeyman Geek♦
Jan 18 '17 at 12:50
1
1
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy provides this capability. If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy. You can use this link to learn more about this method: technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/… - If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
– InterLinked
Apr 26 '16 at 19:56
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy provides this capability. If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy. You can use this link to learn more about this method: technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/… - If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
– InterLinked
Apr 26 '16 at 19:56
1
1
I had the same question last month when I had 7 computers to configure the same. Wish @lnterLinked had seen it. That would have been a great tool.
– CharlieRB
Apr 26 '16 at 20:26
I had the same question last month when I had 7 computers to configure the same. Wish @lnterLinked had seen it. That would have been a great tool.
– CharlieRB
Apr 26 '16 at 20:26
@InterLinked - you ought to flesh that out and post that as an answer.
– Journeyman Geek♦
Jan 18 '17 at 12:50
@InterLinked - you ought to flesh that out and post that as an answer.
– Journeyman Geek♦
Jan 18 '17 at 12:50
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
up vote
8
down vote
WARNING: The script runs without confirmation and feedback. It worked for me, but I don't know if it would work for everybody.
From this and this, I made the following script, which did the thing for me:
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
It unpins all programs from start menu.
For non-english Windows, you should probably replace 'Un.*pin from Start' by another sentence.
Run
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() }
To check what's yours. In French : '&Désépingler de la page d''accueil'
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!
– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
An alternative to the method InterLinked suggested is to use PowerShell to remove the apps (this completely removes the app's, not just hides them).
Get-AppXPackage | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
For more see this tutorial. http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/4689-apps-uninstall-windows-10-a.html
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can get your Windows 7 start menu back by using "Classic Start". This program will replace the Microsoft "Metro" start menu. It is highly configurable, allowing you to get an XP, or Win7 look. This is the first app I install on Win10 if I'm not using a touchscreen.
It looks like this:
You can also replace that little shell with any icon you want, if you want to change your start menu button.
Check it out:
https://github.com/passionate-coder/Classic-Start
1
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
This script works well
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
On Win 10 versions 1709 and 1803 it removes all shortcuts except the shortcuts which are the links (not shortcuts) to install the applications from the Store (News, Speed Test, and e.t.c).
This script will remove them when they're installed.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy Editor provides this capability. You can use a group policy template to manage settings at scale.
If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy.
You can use this link to learn more about this method
If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
1
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
add a comment |
up vote
-2
down vote
I use the free version Startmenux to get a windows XP like start menu with no tiles and a full list of programs accross the screen rather than hidden in that scrolling menu (yuck).
I believe that there are other similar programs. Here is an article that introduces others, for fairness.
1
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
add a comment |
up vote
-3
down vote
To purge your newly bought computer from all the malware pre-installed on it, you need to start fresh with a clean installation of Windows 10.
- Download tool now
- Accept
- Nothing
- Start
If you also wish to uninstall all Windows Store apps from the computer, you can use this command in Administrator PowerShell :
Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
. Because the Start Menu comes only with Windows Store apps, this will remove them all.
You will, however, need to reinstall every Windows Store apps that you need.
You can also create a PowerShell script that will remove them all. The syntax of the command is Pin-App "Mail" -unpin
, just replace Mail by the unwanted tile, and copy-paste the command once per tile to remove. Good luck!
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
2
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
8
down vote
WARNING: The script runs without confirmation and feedback. It worked for me, but I don't know if it would work for everybody.
From this and this, I made the following script, which did the thing for me:
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
It unpins all programs from start menu.
For non-english Windows, you should probably replace 'Un.*pin from Start' by another sentence.
Run
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() }
To check what's yours. In French : '&Désépingler de la page d''accueil'
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!
– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
WARNING: The script runs without confirmation and feedback. It worked for me, but I don't know if it would work for everybody.
From this and this, I made the following script, which did the thing for me:
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
It unpins all programs from start menu.
For non-english Windows, you should probably replace 'Un.*pin from Start' by another sentence.
Run
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() }
To check what's yours. In French : '&Désépingler de la page d''accueil'
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!
– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
add a comment |
up vote
8
down vote
up vote
8
down vote
WARNING: The script runs without confirmation and feedback. It worked for me, but I don't know if it would work for everybody.
From this and this, I made the following script, which did the thing for me:
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
It unpins all programs from start menu.
For non-english Windows, you should probably replace 'Un.*pin from Start' by another sentence.
Run
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() }
To check what's yours. In French : '&Désépingler de la page d''accueil'
WARNING: The script runs without confirmation and feedback. It worked for me, but I don't know if it would work for everybody.
From this and this, I made the following script, which did the thing for me:
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
It unpins all programs from start menu.
For non-english Windows, you should probably replace 'Un.*pin from Start' by another sentence.
Run
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() }
To check what's yours. In French : '&Désépingler de la page d''accueil'
edited Nov 27 at 20:35
Exrelev
32
32
answered Apr 4 at 6:10
max630
18316
18316
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!
– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
add a comment |
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!
– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
This worked for me, though left odd apps still there (like Translator & Duolingo). I was slightly paranoid so first did Start > Run > "shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}" to verify this was the All Programs special folder. I then ran
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').Items() | ? { $null -ne ($_.Verbs() | ? { $_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start' }) } | select Name
to see what was about to be unpinned. Awesome find!– mlhDev
Apr 27 at 14:33
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
Thanks, it works, better than cleaning them all by hand
– Adrian Moisa
May 2 at 13:01
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
An alternative to the method InterLinked suggested is to use PowerShell to remove the apps (this completely removes the app's, not just hides them).
Get-AppXPackage | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
For more see this tutorial. http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/4689-apps-uninstall-windows-10-a.html
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
An alternative to the method InterLinked suggested is to use PowerShell to remove the apps (this completely removes the app's, not just hides them).
Get-AppXPackage | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
For more see this tutorial. http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/4689-apps-uninstall-windows-10-a.html
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
An alternative to the method InterLinked suggested is to use PowerShell to remove the apps (this completely removes the app's, not just hides them).
Get-AppXPackage | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
For more see this tutorial. http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/4689-apps-uninstall-windows-10-a.html
An alternative to the method InterLinked suggested is to use PowerShell to remove the apps (this completely removes the app's, not just hides them).
Get-AppXPackage | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
For more see this tutorial. http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/4689-apps-uninstall-windows-10-a.html
answered May 22 '16 at 1:25
Curtis
44825
44825
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
add a comment |
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
The question is just about hiding them. And what if you remove "App Connector" render Windows Store useless?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:08
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can get your Windows 7 start menu back by using "Classic Start". This program will replace the Microsoft "Metro" start menu. It is highly configurable, allowing you to get an XP, or Win7 look. This is the first app I install on Win10 if I'm not using a touchscreen.
It looks like this:
You can also replace that little shell with any icon you want, if you want to change your start menu button.
Check it out:
https://github.com/passionate-coder/Classic-Start
1
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can get your Windows 7 start menu back by using "Classic Start". This program will replace the Microsoft "Metro" start menu. It is highly configurable, allowing you to get an XP, or Win7 look. This is the first app I install on Win10 if I'm not using a touchscreen.
It looks like this:
You can also replace that little shell with any icon you want, if you want to change your start menu button.
Check it out:
https://github.com/passionate-coder/Classic-Start
1
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
You can get your Windows 7 start menu back by using "Classic Start". This program will replace the Microsoft "Metro" start menu. It is highly configurable, allowing you to get an XP, or Win7 look. This is the first app I install on Win10 if I'm not using a touchscreen.
It looks like this:
You can also replace that little shell with any icon you want, if you want to change your start menu button.
Check it out:
https://github.com/passionate-coder/Classic-Start
You can get your Windows 7 start menu back by using "Classic Start". This program will replace the Microsoft "Metro" start menu. It is highly configurable, allowing you to get an XP, or Win7 look. This is the first app I install on Win10 if I'm not using a touchscreen.
It looks like this:
You can also replace that little shell with any icon you want, if you want to change your start menu button.
Check it out:
https://github.com/passionate-coder/Classic-Start
edited Jul 27 at 22:31
answered Jul 27 '17 at 20:58
HackSlash
1,8351620
1,8351620
1
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
add a comment |
1
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
1
1
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
As of Dec 3rd, 2017 , this "Classic Shell" is no longer actively developed but I have install it today and it will work. The code for the latest version is released on SourceForge. More details here.
– Nasri Najib
Jan 12 at 8:17
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
Thanks. I didn't know. I certainly hope other developers can keep it alive. I use this software on many systems.
– HackSlash
Jan 15 at 16:53
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
This script works well
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
On Win 10 versions 1709 and 1803 it removes all shortcuts except the shortcuts which are the links (not shortcuts) to install the applications from the Store (News, Speed Test, and e.t.c).
This script will remove them when they're installed.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
This script works well
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
On Win 10 versions 1709 and 1803 it removes all shortcuts except the shortcuts which are the links (not shortcuts) to install the applications from the Store (News, Speed Test, and e.t.c).
This script will remove them when they're installed.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
This script works well
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
On Win 10 versions 1709 and 1803 it removes all shortcuts except the shortcuts which are the links (not shortcuts) to install the applications from the Store (News, Speed Test, and e.t.c).
This script will remove them when they're installed.
This script works well
(New-Object -Com Shell.Application).
NameSpace('shell:::{4234d49b-0245-4df3-b780-3893943456e1}').
Items() |
%{ $_.Verbs() } |
?{$_.Name -match 'Un.*pin from Start'} |
%{$_.DoIt()}
On Win 10 versions 1709 and 1803 it removes all shortcuts except the shortcuts which are the links (not shortcuts) to install the applications from the Store (News, Speed Test, and e.t.c).
This script will remove them when they're installed.
edited Nov 13 at 0:20
zx485
631513
631513
answered Nov 13 at 0:09
Sergey Trukhanov
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy Editor provides this capability. You can use a group policy template to manage settings at scale.
If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy.
You can use this link to learn more about this method
If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
1
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy Editor provides this capability. You can use a group policy template to manage settings at scale.
If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy.
You can use this link to learn more about this method
If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
1
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy Editor provides this capability. You can use a group policy template to manage settings at scale.
If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy.
You can use this link to learn more about this method
If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy Editor provides this capability. You can use a group policy template to manage settings at scale.
If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy.
You can use this link to learn more about this method
If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
answered Jan 18 '17 at 17:04
InterLinked
1,1161130
1,1161130
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
1
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
add a comment |
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
1
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
Isn't this limited to the Enterprise edition?
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 5:08
1
1
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Group Policy Editor is limited to Enterprise and Pro but there are workarounds for Home - superuser.com/questions/1018145/…
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 10:18
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
Yeah, I have gpedit on Pro, but the specific policies for tile templates are Enterprise-only I've heard.
– grawity
Feb 6 '17 at 12:20
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
@grawity I'm not familiar with the templates themselves. You would have to look into that
– InterLinked
Feb 6 '17 at 14:24
add a comment |
up vote
-2
down vote
I use the free version Startmenux to get a windows XP like start menu with no tiles and a full list of programs accross the screen rather than hidden in that scrolling menu (yuck).
I believe that there are other similar programs. Here is an article that introduces others, for fairness.
1
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
add a comment |
up vote
-2
down vote
I use the free version Startmenux to get a windows XP like start menu with no tiles and a full list of programs accross the screen rather than hidden in that scrolling menu (yuck).
I believe that there are other similar programs. Here is an article that introduces others, for fairness.
1
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
add a comment |
up vote
-2
down vote
up vote
-2
down vote
I use the free version Startmenux to get a windows XP like start menu with no tiles and a full list of programs accross the screen rather than hidden in that scrolling menu (yuck).
I believe that there are other similar programs. Here is an article that introduces others, for fairness.
I use the free version Startmenux to get a windows XP like start menu with no tiles and a full list of programs accross the screen rather than hidden in that scrolling menu (yuck).
I believe that there are other similar programs. Here is an article that introduces others, for fairness.
answered Jan 18 '17 at 5:42
timtak
10512
10512
1
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
add a comment |
1
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
1
1
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
link-only answers are not really helpful.
– Ramhound
Jan 18 '17 at 15:12
add a comment |
up vote
-3
down vote
To purge your newly bought computer from all the malware pre-installed on it, you need to start fresh with a clean installation of Windows 10.
- Download tool now
- Accept
- Nothing
- Start
If you also wish to uninstall all Windows Store apps from the computer, you can use this command in Administrator PowerShell :
Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
. Because the Start Menu comes only with Windows Store apps, this will remove them all.
You will, however, need to reinstall every Windows Store apps that you need.
You can also create a PowerShell script that will remove them all. The syntax of the command is Pin-App "Mail" -unpin
, just replace Mail by the unwanted tile, and copy-paste the command once per tile to remove. Good luck!
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
2
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
add a comment |
up vote
-3
down vote
To purge your newly bought computer from all the malware pre-installed on it, you need to start fresh with a clean installation of Windows 10.
- Download tool now
- Accept
- Nothing
- Start
If you also wish to uninstall all Windows Store apps from the computer, you can use this command in Administrator PowerShell :
Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
. Because the Start Menu comes only with Windows Store apps, this will remove them all.
You will, however, need to reinstall every Windows Store apps that you need.
You can also create a PowerShell script that will remove them all. The syntax of the command is Pin-App "Mail" -unpin
, just replace Mail by the unwanted tile, and copy-paste the command once per tile to remove. Good luck!
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
2
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
add a comment |
up vote
-3
down vote
up vote
-3
down vote
To purge your newly bought computer from all the malware pre-installed on it, you need to start fresh with a clean installation of Windows 10.
- Download tool now
- Accept
- Nothing
- Start
If you also wish to uninstall all Windows Store apps from the computer, you can use this command in Administrator PowerShell :
Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
. Because the Start Menu comes only with Windows Store apps, this will remove them all.
You will, however, need to reinstall every Windows Store apps that you need.
You can also create a PowerShell script that will remove them all. The syntax of the command is Pin-App "Mail" -unpin
, just replace Mail by the unwanted tile, and copy-paste the command once per tile to remove. Good luck!
To purge your newly bought computer from all the malware pre-installed on it, you need to start fresh with a clean installation of Windows 10.
- Download tool now
- Accept
- Nothing
- Start
If you also wish to uninstall all Windows Store apps from the computer, you can use this command in Administrator PowerShell :
Get-AppxPackage -AllUsers | where-object {$_.name –notlike “*store*”} | Remove-AppxPackage
. Because the Start Menu comes only with Windows Store apps, this will remove them all.
You will, however, need to reinstall every Windows Store apps that you need.
You can also create a PowerShell script that will remove them all. The syntax of the command is Pin-App "Mail" -unpin
, just replace Mail by the unwanted tile, and copy-paste the command once per tile to remove. Good luck!
edited Feb 6 '17 at 4:21
answered Dec 6 '16 at 19:17
NatoBoram
409
409
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
2
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
add a comment |
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
2
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
External links can break or be unavailable, in which case your answer would not be useful. Please include the essential information within your answer and use the link for attribution and further reading. Thanks.
– fixer1234
Dec 6 '16 at 19:52
2
2
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
Did you even read the freakin' question?
– user477799
Jan 18 '17 at 7:06
add a comment |
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1
You mentioned you are using Windows 10. Group Policy provides this capability. If you want no tiles, make sure your template has no tiles and deploy. If you want certain tiles here/there, arrange them once, capture, and then deploy. You can use this link to learn more about this method: technet.microsoft.com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/… - If you don't have gpedit.msc, you can use a 3rd party workaround to get it installed, but that would only be if you are using the Home edition. Otherwise, this should work as is.
– InterLinked
Apr 26 '16 at 19:56
1
I had the same question last month when I had 7 computers to configure the same. Wish @lnterLinked had seen it. That would have been a great tool.
– CharlieRB
Apr 26 '16 at 20:26
@InterLinked - you ought to flesh that out and post that as an answer.
– Journeyman Geek♦
Jan 18 '17 at 12:50