Spyke
lemmy.world

How could you forget the most important one: Ctrl + Shift + Alt + Win + L to open LinkedIn

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xepreply

This seems to have been removed at some point. It doesn't work for me any more, but it definitely did before. Edit: Ah, I've manually disabled it in PowerToy's keyboard manager.

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BreadOvenreply
lemmy.world

I actually use that with O instead of L. Opens outlook on the desktop app.

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FiveMacsreply
lemmy.ca

I click the outlook button. Much faster and more reliable then a 5 key 'shortcut'

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Fair enough. I just like it when I'm typing and realize my outlook isn't open and the desktop is covered in windows. Even 3 screens doesn't help this problem sometimes haha.

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Ledivinreply
lemmy.world

FWIW, there are a few of those that are useful: W is word, E is excel, and I'd bet that the rest of office each has one as well... those are the only two I use regularly 🤷‍♂️

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I'm forced to use Outlook, so those and O opening it in the desktop app is handy.

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The fact that this is a photo of a printed sheet for hotkeys is very on-brand for most Windows users.

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lemmy.world

Don’t forget that Alt+F4 takes a screenshot when you’re playing your favorite multi-player video game.

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If you're gaming on Linux and you need more speed, you hold Alt + Sysrq (Sometimes PrtSc) and then (while holding) type out R E I S U B one letter at a time.

Boom 200% speed increase and sub-ms latency

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Ctrl + F5 is actually refresh without using cached items, helpful if the page gets wonky sometimes. Just F5 is refresh.

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One that is particularly useful for IT Tech

While using Run (Win+R), you can launch any command with a admin elevation prompt by pressing Ctrl+Shift-Enter to launch the command.

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There's a couple of these I didn't know and I will find very useful!

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I use this all the time for meeting transcripts. All of the “uh” and “ummmmm” and “and and”, “it it”, “I I”, etc. It shortens it just a bit.

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lemmy.world

Ooooo, I didn't know that the Snip tool had one - thanks!

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dubyakayreply
lemmy.ca

Look into Greenshot and you will quickly forget about any built in screenshotting and snipping capabilities of windows.

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Ledivinreply
lemmy.world

I literally only ever take a screenshot and maybe crop it. What functionality could it possibly provide that I care about?

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For one, it's much more lightweight and responsive than the built in tools (old and new).

Beyond that you can add Paint level graphics as objects to images, so you can highlight better in documentation.

You can also use it to copy and paste between apps and websites that would otherwise not handle clipboard properly, like say copying between JIRA, Slack and some MS apps, by recovering images as clipboard data instead of copying the image file itself.

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Yeah I didn't know this one either. Every time I see one of these cheatsheets, I learn something new

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Ctrl+win+ left or right arrow changes desktops quickly.

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You reached the end

A cool guide for Windows users | Spyke