It adjusts your Windows User Interface, including menu speed, window animation, and Internet Explorer After you install it, open control panel, and you'll find that you now have the TweakUI applet. Open the applet, and you'll see a dialog box with tabs labeled Mouse, Network, General, New, Add/Remove, Explorer, Repair, Desktop, My Computer, and Paranoia (I'm not kidding). With these options before you, there are changes you can make that will allow more computing pleasure. Try it.
TweakUI Tabs
The Mouse tab controls mouse sensitivity to double-clicks and drags; this functionality is no big deal. But, it can also speed up the appearance of your Start menu. You can configure in the registry the duration of the delay between the time you click Start and the time the menu appears; it provides a nice slider to control the delay, so you can play around with the delay and discover which setting you like best.
The General tab provides check boxes that let you turn on and off error beeps, smooth scrolling, and window animation. You can also specify locations for your Desktop, Favorites, My Documents, Recent Documents, and other user-specific folders. This functionality is useful because NT tends to stick all of its files on the drive you install the operating system (OS) on. If that drive fills up, you might be able to free up necessary space by moving the desktop to another drive.
The Explorer tab lets you control how Explorer identifies an icon as a shortcut rather than an object. You can tell Explorer not to automatically prefix a shortcut's title with Shortcut to, and you can suppress the small boxed arrow that appears by default in the lower left corner of shortcut icons. If you turn off your Welcome Screen tips, you can use the Explorer tab to turn them back on.
The Repair tab rebuilds icons, repairs the font folder, and repairs system files.
The New tab lets you customize the menu that appears when you right-click a container and select New. For example, on my system, I can right-click my C drive and create a new text file, HTML file, or Word document. The New tab lets you add file types to the menu's list and remove file types from the list.
Paranoia has two subsections … Covering Your Tracks and Things That Happen Behind Your Back. The first section lets you tell your system to automatically erase the queue of recently visited documents when you log on so other people can't easily see which files you've been using. The second section lets you stop music CDs and Autorun CD-ROMs from automatically playing when you put them in the CD-ROM drive.
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