I was just about to add comment mentioning sysinternals! Haha I’m still amazed at the number of things he found a way to hook into and utilize EDIT: I wasn’t to end of video yet when I posted, didn’t realize he mentioned sysinternals too lol
You forgot Volumouse from Nirsoft, you have absolutely no idea how much handy it is to control the volume pretty much instantly with the mouse hovering over the taskbar (or anything you set) and scrolling. It can also be used to control the screen brightness and other audio parameters like your mic volume for example. It's just neat!
Neat, I just checked and that's built-in to my system. I bound the keys for that to Win+Up and Win+Down and now I have one more easy method. I'm using Slackware Linux with KDE, by the way.
@@anon_y_mousse I was looking for an alternative to Volumouse on Linux Mint but I couldn't find any, and someone mentioned that it was built-in but I couldn't find it so I gave up. All I wanted was to control the volume with the mouse without having to touch the keyboard ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I'm currently adding this whole suite to a rescue USB that I previously made thanks to your video on Ventoy and Hiro's rescue CD. So now it's basically going to be the ultimate all-in-one software toolkit.
What was his previous video? I am thinking of making one rescue usb too. But I am quite novice in these things. I am confused as to what folder and files I should put.
I also like WinDirStat which gives a really useful visual representation of your data storage. Great for finding big files or folders that hog your SSD!
I run "Wireless Network Watcher" from Nirsoft all the time. It shows all devices connected to my network. It does NOT ONLY show wireless, but ALL devices. Allows me to see if a neighbor or visiting guest is trying to jump onto my network. TIP - modify the USER TEXT for all items that you DO recognize - put some common text at the front (like your initials). This way you can tell at a glance if a device is something new or something you've already recognized as being "OK". (I actually put WIRED - or WIRELESS - in front of each device rather than using my initials - helps me to troubleshoot by quickly identifying how the device is connecting - but the choice is yours.)
Yeahhhh! Recognition for NirSoft! Awesome! This great developer and Mark Russinovich's SysInternals Suite have some of the best Power Tools for Windows ever! (Process Explorer, for ex., should be embedded in Windows already). Thank you for bringing this! 💪
Procexp from sys internals is a godsend with the process eyedropper where you select a window and it immediately shows you the relevant process. Super handy when you get popups with no apparent source
ThioJoe knows what's good.. he's right, this Nirsoft stuff is super amazing. His stuff for fixing context menus and file type names is almost impossible to do otherwise.
This is pretty cool, that guy is single-handedly fixing all the deficiencies in Windows. Most of this functionality can already be done with a basic install of Linux, though not quite as easily or with as much polish, at first. There are of course many tools for these on Linux with polish, but not all in one place like this guy provides. Although, I suppose one could argue that the package management systems provide the "one place", but that's only if you know what you're looking for.
I think, that BatteryInfo is pretty cool, because if you are on an old laptop, and want to know, when the battery will die (I mean like force shutdown the computer) and other stuff about the bat tree, you just open it and maybe enable logging, which is useful, when you want to know, when your tree for bats died.
ControlMyMonitor is an extremely useful one. Since Most NirSoft programs support cmd commands you can create scripts to change the brightness and port source of your monitors at the click of a button (as well as many more settings)
One of my favorite free tools is one called SpaceMonger, which makes it VERY easy to tell what's taking up space on your drive. There's a newer version, but I still like and use SpaceMonger 1.4.0.
RunAsDate is useful, as on rare occasions some poorly made programs break after a certain date. Most notably, two years ago GTA 4 Complete Edition broke and RunAsDate was the only convenient way to play the game before it got patched.
I'm guessing that was related to Leap year? Because yeah! This year a bunch of software and games all had their own Y2K events all because it was February 29th. Handy to know there is a rando program that can fix such issues.
My thought was that some games use the real world clock provided by Windows. Maybe if you ran those games on a different RunAsDate, the player could trick the game into going forward or backward in time, to the frustration of the game developers, who wanted the game to run on a real world clock.
thanks again for sifting through the useless info out there and sharing the useful info with us, most people dont find spending hours diving into this kind of stuff nearly as interesting as I do and i'd assume you do aswell. these vids infinitely increase the likelyhood of someone stumbling upon these things by chance :)
Thanks for your insight on another video. Been using Norton for years. However, now that I am practically broke, i had to find a great and inexpensive replacement. Now using Guardio. Praying that it is going to work. Things were a lot easier and less stressful before the machine took over. Take care.
@@neoqueto They're not entirely not icons either. It's a RIFF with icons for each frame of the animation. Also, icons are just fancy bitmaps with transparency masks and done as a list so you can have multiple resolutions in one file.
Wireless network watcher from NirSoft is such a helpful tool. It's simple but it has helped me detect devices connected to friends or family wifi that are hogging bandwidth (or they are unwanted devices). So useful to do initial diagnostics.
My favorite tool is Chocolatey Package Manager for windows. It helps me install almost any software, and set a schedule to automatically update it. If you are familiar with Linux, it has a similar feel.
i followed you for more than a year i liked your videos because its very interested and beneficial for me and i am also a student of computer science and your videos are very help full for me
I use NirSoft Wireless Network Watcher (I use it for hard wired network) every day to keep track of which computers are down. Also Network Adapter Watch and WiFi Info View give an easy way to retrieve information on your computer network connections and what WiFi connections are near me.
Awesome video. I have USBLogView running right now due to the exact issue you mentioned about my Win10 system dinging (infuriatingly) when unattended. Have unplugged EVERY USB device to try and see what was the cause, only to hear 'Ding' a short while later. Thanks for the tip, now we wait...
A couple years back one of my Oculus Rift sensors would randomly start to connect and disconnect repeatedly and back-to-back. I didn't know what was causing it at first so I had to look in the device manager and refresh it whenever it did, and try to figure out which device had appeared or disappeared, which was tedious and took forever. USBLogView would have solved it in seconds, but I didn't know about it then.
@@ThioJoe As an update, I tried USBLogView and it seems to think my issue is with "Generic USB Hub" and "Generic MassStorageClass USB Device". Per SSHJAGUAR's comment to my post, I just turned off 'USB selective suspend setting'. Now we wait.
My favorite part of BlueScreenView is that you can toggle an old-school WinXP style blue screen display in the lower pane which (to me) is a lot more useful since I know how to read those
I have been using nirsoft utilities for more than 12 years. Initially I used it to stop running malware when task manager couldn't do it. I also used it to uninstall programs that were not shown in control panel (sneaky Trojans that would eat up my RAM)
Hi Thio. I love using mailpv,it is super usefull for extraction of passwords on outlook installations. Ear trumpet lets you control everything with audio running on your pc,best is that you can set vol independendly. Best free search app is everything and its independent from windows search.
NirSoft is awesome, I've had several problems over the years or needed certain information, and it was surprising how many times nirsoft had a program to do just what I needed. As for RunAsDate, I did find one good practical use for it, I have a bunch of old flash games on my computer but since the devs decided to give it a fixed cut off date where it pretty much won't run anymore, I just use RunAsDate to run the Flash Viewer program with a date /before/ flash's cutoff date. I know there's third parties trying to make their own software to run flash games, but last I checked they weren't 100 percent compatible, and I have a custom flash launcher that uses the ActiveX control, which I'm not aware of any third party software that has a replacement for it.
nircmd - it can open bat files and hide the window so it's really useful for running scheduled tasks hidden in the background. Of course it has many other functions too.
Haha, Nirsoft, yes, I remember it from old days :D Now all the questions - like why this functionality is not in the operating system, are solved. They are in my operating system.
NirCMD is pretty nice. I've been using it in the past. I remember one use case was setting a macro on a keyboard to look for my browser. If it was open, it would drag it to the foreground. If not, it would launch the browser. Without it the keyboard software would just keep launching new instances.
I have been using BatteryInfoView from this Nirsoft, it's pretty accurate for most laptop to check on how is the battery's health condition, the battery usage and charging time estimation. Really helped my days.
Ohhh yea. This guy...if you're curious how IT folks can transfer your emails without your password, get lost product keys and so much more... It is thanks to this guy.
This is so useful. I was actually looking for the icon extractor to use in python. Now I can just use the shell command from subprocess to use it in Python!
Special folders view! That's the one! I used it a while ago but lost it due a hdd crash and couldn't remember it's name (pathetic, I know) Thanks a lot man!
I'm putting together a flashdrive using containing Medicat, I'm adding more iso's but also want to add this collection of tools. I'm not sure if I'm missing something but when I extract to my flashdrive I get the tools but also a html file with a yellow ? Can I delete the html files.
I'm gonna test AdvancedRun now to see if it solves one very common issue I have with various games: Them starting on the wrong/non-preferred monitor. I don't know if it's Windows remembering which monitor a program was last run on, or the program itself, but you take it for granted so much and it only takes one bothersome program to ruin it. EDIT: Well, this might be useful for games that don't require extra launchers/scripts. I also tried MultiMonitorTool from NirSoft, but that didn't help with the particularly troublesome game I'm trying to sort.
I have written a program that counts the number of users and rings a bell if the number of users drops to a low figure. Problem is I use a headset so my program calls a NirSoft program that changes the speakers to the computer speaksr, rings the bell and then revert to the headset speakers. I can’t remember the name of it. Allows you to redirect the sound device.
nir guy is hero! sysinternals tools were by sysinternal not made by microsoft, there is a difference.. MS bought sysinternals over.. as MS bought DOS, RemoteDesktop, Exchange.. MS does not build, they usually buy over..
Nir is most likely (according to the name and small search on Google) from my country :-) I did use in the past some of his tools but lately I didn't some are old some have other ways... BUT! YOU JUST CHANGED MY LIFE!!! I recently started making some videos with over the table view and I connect my camera to the second input of the PC, my monitor has some not so comfy touch buttons to switch inputs etc and I'd wish to have some better way, now thanks to you showing the "ControlMyMonitor" I'm gonna make those into a macro key on my keyboard!!!! Thanks!!!
I have a wireless modem from my cable internet provider( Sparklight ), and at times, the modem and/or my laptop goes offline for some reason. I suspect that someone has hacked my wireless signal, and is using my internet. I have found out from Sparklight that the modem isn't equipped to allow me to change my security key( password ). I wonder if there is a program which would encrypt my wireless signal between the modem and my laptop so no one can use it except me. A program which would allow me to detect whom is using my wireless signal would be great as well. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
You should have included the NirSoft Installer System (I don't know if it's exactly named like that, I'm almost exclusively on Linux since a year now), It's an installer creator which many programs use for their installers, like e.g. IrfanView. Only important for power users tho.
@@Juliodax I think it's called like that, yes... @Felipe Lorenzzon Me too! (the only problem is that it needs a while to start because Wine has to start first...)
The "nircmd" tool has an option called "setdefaultsounddevice" and using batch scripts, I can set the default system output device and input device. I did this because the Oculus software always sets itself to the default and there are times I want to go back and forth between using my headset and my desktop stuff. I just tell all of my software to use the system defaults and then change which are defaults when I need them!
This Nir guy is actually my hero .
Yes. He’s great
Yes
This person got me with that ps3 to ps4 trick back then though
Samy is My Hero :-)
@@riceballsenthusiast5899 rip
Mark Russinovich (Sysinternals) and Nir Sofer (NirSoft) have done more for Windows than literally any other dev out there
I was just about to add comment mentioning sysinternals! Haha
I’m still amazed at the number of things he found a way to hook into and utilize
EDIT: I wasn’t to end of video yet when I posted, didn’t realize he mentioned sysinternals too lol
M$ felt the same way and bought Sysinternals so Mark I think still works for M$ today.
@@absoleet Mark is the CTO of Microsoft's cloud product now!
Out where?
What about Dave Plummer (Task manager)? Can you imagine living without task manager?
You forgot Volumouse from Nirsoft, you have absolutely no idea how much handy it is to control the volume pretty much instantly with the mouse hovering over the taskbar (or anything you set) and scrolling.
It can also be used to control the screen brightness and other audio parameters like your mic volume for example. It's just neat!
Yeah this sounds epic !...cheers.
Neat, I just checked and that's built-in to my system. I bound the keys for that to Win+Up and Win+Down and now I have one more easy method. I'm using Slackware Linux with KDE, by the way.
@@anon_y_mousse I was looking for an alternative to Volumouse on Linux Mint but I couldn't find any, and someone mentioned that it was built-in but I couldn't find it so I gave up. All I wanted was to control the volume with the mouse without having to touch the keyboard ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@@andymouse Glad that helped! Cheers!
@@anon_y_mousse It's great, every OS should have this feature and custom keyboard shortcuts. I use email+shift or email+shift+alt to control volume
I'm currently adding this whole suite to a rescue USB that I previously made thanks to your video on Ventoy and Hiro's rescue CD. So now it's basically going to be the ultimate all-in-one software toolkit.
What was his previous video? I am thinking of making one rescue usb too. But I am quite novice in these things. I am confused as to what folder and files I should put.
I also like WinDirStat which gives a really useful visual representation of your data storage. Great for finding big files or folders that hog your SSD!
I use WinDirStat too! :)
I've heard that other programs, like WizTree, are faster for local storage using NTFS tho. Just as a sidenote.
@@nurax WizTree is faster for me on either HDD or SSD
@@re.liable Thanks for confirming that!
oh he made it? i used it for years i had no idea lol
Spacesniffer is my go to for this. So good.
I run "Wireless Network Watcher" from Nirsoft all the time. It shows all devices connected to my network. It does NOT ONLY show wireless, but ALL devices. Allows me to see if a neighbor or visiting guest is trying to jump onto my network. TIP - modify the USER TEXT for all items that you DO recognize - put some common text at the front (like your initials). This way you can tell at a glance if a device is something new or something you've already recognized as being "OK". (I actually put WIRED - or WIRELESS - in front of each device rather than using my initials - helps me to troubleshoot by quickly identifying how the device is connecting - but the choice is yours.)
Yeahhhh! Recognition for NirSoft! Awesome! This great developer and Mark Russinovich's SysInternals Suite have some of the best Power Tools for Windows ever! (Process Explorer, for ex., should be embedded in Windows already). Thank you for bringing this! 💪
Procexp from sys internals is a godsend with the process eyedropper where you select a window and it immediately shows you the relevant process. Super handy when you get popups with no apparent source
Wow, I never realized all the Nirsoft tools were made by one man. Have sent a donation to his site.
ThioJoe knows what's good.. he's right, this Nirsoft stuff is super amazing. His stuff for fixing context menus and file type names is almost impossible to do otherwise.
This is pretty cool, that guy is single-handedly fixing all the deficiencies in Windows. Most of this functionality can already be done with a basic install of Linux, though not quite as easily or with as much polish, at first. There are of course many tools for these on Linux with polish, but not all in one place like this guy provides. Although, I suppose one could argue that the package management systems provide the "one place", but that's only if you know what you're looking for.
I think, that BatteryInfo is pretty cool, because if you are on an old laptop, and want to know, when the battery will die (I mean like force shutdown the computer) and other stuff about the bat tree, you just open it and maybe enable logging, which is useful, when you want to know, when your tree for bats died.
At first I thought "bat tree" was a typo, then you hit me with "tree for bats" 😂😂😂
Well played
@@eIucidate DankPods reference BTW.
ControlMyMonitor is an extremely useful one. Since Most NirSoft programs support cmd commands you can create scripts to change the brightness and port source of your monitors at the click of a button (as well as many more settings)
One of my favorite free tools is one called SpaceMonger, which makes it VERY easy to tell what's taking up space on your drive.
There's a newer version, but I still like and use SpaceMonger 1.4.0.
RunAsDate is useful, as on rare occasions some poorly made programs break after a certain date. Most notably, two years ago GTA 4 Complete Edition broke and RunAsDate was the only convenient way to play the game before it got patched.
Some older games could also be extended similarly beyond their 'free trial'...
I'm guessing that was related to Leap year?
Because yeah! This year a bunch of software and games all had their own Y2K events all because it was February 29th. Handy to know there is a rando program that can fix such issues.
My thought was that some games use the real world clock provided by Windows. Maybe if you ran those games on a different RunAsDate, the player could trick the game into going forward or backward in time, to the frustration of the game developers, who wanted the game to run on a real world clock.
Me: isn't a Power user
Also me: downloads every power tool I'm never going to use
As long as you’re interested and research what they actually do, this already makes you enough of a power user.
NOW this looks like fun!! I'm glad you brought this to light. I'm going to have to schedule a month of weekends. You're the best ThioJoe!!!
I just waaay too much time playing around with these tools. Such a useful toolkit. Thanks for the video. Top-notch content.
thanks again for sifting through the useless info out there and sharing the useful info with us, most people dont find spending hours diving into this kind of stuff nearly as interesting as I do and i'd assume you do aswell. these vids infinitely increase the likelyhood of someone stumbling upon these things by chance :)
Thanks for your insight on another video. Been using Norton for years. However, now that I am practically broke, i had to find a great and inexpensive replacement. Now using Guardio. Praying that it is going to work. Things were a lot easier and less stressful before the machine took over. Take care.
Cursors ARE icons, the only differences are a few bytes in the file header (and the file extension of course)
Not .ANI cursors.
@@neoqueto yes, I was talking about non-animated cursors
@@neoqueto They're not entirely not icons either. It's a RIFF with icons for each frame of the animation. Also, icons are just fancy bitmaps with transparency masks and done as a list so you can have multiple resolutions in one file.
Wireless network watcher from NirSoft is such a helpful tool. It's simple but it has helped me detect devices connected to friends or family wifi that are hogging bandwidth (or they are unwanted devices). So useful to do initial diagnostics.
My favorite tool is Chocolatey Package Manager for windows. It helps me install almost any software, and set a schedule to automatically update it. If you are familiar with Linux, it has a similar feel.
*Nirsoft is a working class hero* 👨💻
2:22 what's that other windows explorer?
Nir has so many software that he probably sometimes asks himself "Wait, do I have an app for that" while doing something
i followed you for more than a year i liked your videos because its very interested and beneficial for me and i am also a student of computer science and your videos are very help full for me
"This one is more for power users..." - And the giant wall suddenly appears
As usual, your videos are useful enough for me to take an action with regard to my computers
One I use a lot is space sniffer , it shows used space visually , very useful for finding wasted space
Even I use SpaceSniffer mostly, but it sometimes keeps scanning indefinitely on the OS partition. WinDirStat comes pretty handy in such cases.
Sounds alot like TreeSize, which is doing the same thing but with a more modern look to it.
@@RAZKEN. correct
After every one of these videos I end up installing at least one of the things that was covered.
it’s really amazing session, plz continue it for more. Thank You 🙏
I've been using Nirsoft tools since the start. Small, focused, single function tools. They do the job. They just work.
The NirSoft tools are extremely useful and seemingly simple. I wish I had his knowledge.
already knew about this, glad its getting recognition lol
Wireless key view is another nir tool that's very useful. When you come somewhere and they don't remember their wireless password, it helps a lot
Thanks for the tips! I used ShellMenuView to find and fix something that bugged me for a long time!
I use NirSoft Wireless Network Watcher (I use it for hard wired network) every day to keep track of which computers are down. Also Network Adapter Watch and WiFi Info View give an easy way to retrieve information on your computer network connections and what WiFi connections are near me.
Awesome video. I have USBLogView running right now due to the exact issue you mentioned about my Win10 system dinging (infuriatingly) when unattended. Have unplugged EVERY USB device to try and see what was the cause, only to hear 'Ding' a short while later. Thanks for the tip, now we wait...
A couple years back one of my Oculus Rift sensors would randomly start to connect and disconnect repeatedly and back-to-back. I didn't know what was causing it at first so I had to look in the device manager and refresh it whenever it did, and try to figure out which device had appeared or disappeared, which was tedious and took forever. USBLogView would have solved it in seconds, but I didn't know about it then.
Do you have 'USB selective suspend setting' turn on under your Advanced Power Settings? If so try turning that function off.
@@ThioJoe As an update, I tried USBLogView and it seems to think my issue is with "Generic USB Hub" and "Generic MassStorageClass USB Device". Per SSHJAGUAR's comment to my post, I just turned off 'USB selective suspend setting'. Now we wait.
@@sshjaguar Thanks for the input. I just applied turned this off for all USB Root Hubs and USB controllers using Device Manager. Fingers crossed.
My favorite part of BlueScreenView is that you can toggle an old-school WinXP style blue screen display in the lower pane which (to me) is a lot more useful since I know how to read those
I have been using nirsoft utilities for more than 12 years. Initially I used it to stop running malware when task manager couldn't do it. I also used it to uninstall programs that were not shown in control panel (sneaky Trojans that would eat up my RAM)
Amazing video! Been waiting for this type of video for a long time!
Hi Thio.
I love using mailpv,it is super usefull for extraction of passwords on outlook installations.
Ear trumpet lets you control everything with audio running on your pc,best is that you can set vol independendly.
Best free search app is everything and its independent from windows search.
I've used his tools for years! saved myself a bunch of time on troubleshooting
I’ve been looking for a video like this
currports looks very useful, I think I might give it a try
wow a video at my birthday Thx Thiojoe :)
Happy birthday
Happy birthday 🎁 🎉 🎂
Also another cool guy is henrypp with his MemReduct and Simplewall. Lightweight stuff FTW.
This Nir guy is actually a hero .
NirSoft is awesome, I've had several problems over the years or needed certain information, and it was surprising how many times nirsoft had a program to do just what I needed.
As for RunAsDate, I did find one good practical use for it, I have a bunch of old flash games on my computer but since the devs decided to give it a fixed cut off date where it pretty much won't run anymore, I just use RunAsDate to run the Flash Viewer program with a date /before/ flash's cutoff date. I know there's third parties trying to make their own software to run flash games, but last I checked they weren't 100 percent compatible, and I have a custom flash launcher that uses the ActiveX control, which I'm not aware of any third party software that has a replacement for it.
nircmd - it can open bat files and hide the window so it's really useful for running scheduled tasks hidden in the background. Of course it has many other functions too.
1:50 YES
I've been dealing with inconsistent usb dropouts lately, and that sounds like the exact thing to solve the problem!
10:04 RunAsDate sounds cool for accessing April fools and other easter egg content.
His tools are amazing... I sort of forgot about them,until you just reminded me.
Haha, Nirsoft, yes, I remember it from old days :D
Now all the questions - like why this functionality is not in the operating system, are solved. They are in my operating system.
The latest videos have been very useful. Thank you!
NirCMD is pretty nice. I've been using it in the past. I remember one use case was setting a macro on a keyboard to look for my browser. If it was open, it would drag it to the foreground. If not, it would launch the browser.
Without it the keyboard software would just keep launching new instances.
This is similar to a CD I used to download called Hiram’s. It was filled with tools even a windows PE program to get you into your computer.
5:20 - DevManView (better alternative to dev manager)
6:44 - CurrPorts (All current connection your comp is making)
I use something called Default Programs Editor, which can edit the context menu, as well as extension icons, and more cool stuff.
A great use for the start as date program is for starting among us on april 1st without changing your device date.
Yeah, I instantly came up with games for time-based events and easter eggs. No idea what Among Us does on April 1st though
@@jendorei before the most recent update, the skeld was flipped. Now, the characters turn into horses.
Excellent advice on some great tools. Nirsoft is brilliant. Subbed to your channel now.
Free file sync is my fav. Featured a long time ago here.
I have been using BatteryInfoView from this Nirsoft, it's pretty accurate for most laptop to check on how is the battery's health condition, the battery usage and charging time estimation. Really helped my days.
Ohhh yea. This guy...if you're curious how IT folks can transfer your emails without your password, get lost product keys and so much more...
It is thanks to this guy.
woah where is the link to that nirsoft package thing you got in 0:20?i really need to get that thing as well.
This is so useful. I was actually looking for the icon extractor to use in python. Now I can just use the shell command from subprocess to use it in Python!
Special folders view! That's the one! I used it a while ago but lost it due a hdd crash and couldn't remember it's name (pathetic, I know) Thanks a lot man!
WinDirStat is very good with storage management. It's not by Nir but it is really cool.
I'm putting together a flashdrive using containing Medicat, I'm adding more iso's but also want to add this collection of tools. I'm not sure if I'm missing something but when I extract to my flashdrive I get the tools but also a html file with a yellow ? Can I delete the html files.
*Extremely* useful information! *Thanks*
Why is everyone commenting about AMAZING VIDEO! its been 10 minutes you couldnt have watched the video
They know it will be an excellent video. 👌
Wow! That program for BSODs is incredibly useful for me!
Most excellent! Especially the USB Log.
I use Everything almost every day. Very useful.
07:00 its of course official, those folders can be queried by any tool, you actually used one by entering shell:startup earlier
How do you add ico files together in a dll file like there is in system32.dll
Hi sir i remember you mentioned a program in one of your videos about viewing the root directory of windows, can you remind me of its name
I'm gonna test AdvancedRun now to see if it solves one very common issue I have with various games: Them starting on the wrong/non-preferred monitor. I don't know if it's Windows remembering which monitor a program was last run on, or the program itself, but you take it for granted so much and it only takes one bothersome program to ruin it.
EDIT: Well, this might be useful for games that don't require extra launchers/scripts.
I also tried MultiMonitorTool from NirSoft, but that didn't help with the particularly troublesome game I'm trying to sort.
i love how in the shell32 thing there is a lot of icons and then theres just a tree
Thanks for the Video, Bro!!!
You missed one where you can put a shortcut link to empty the recycle bin. You can even set hotkeys for it.
I have written a program that counts the number of users and rings a bell if the number of users drops to a low figure. Problem is I use a headset so my program calls a NirSoft program that changes the speakers to the computer speaksr, rings the bell and then revert to the headset speakers. I can’t remember the name of it.
Allows you to redirect the sound device.
nir guy is hero!
sysinternals tools were by sysinternal not made by microsoft, there is a difference.. MS bought sysinternals over.. as MS bought DOS, RemoteDesktop, Exchange.. MS does not build, they usually buy over..
That’s why i said *published* by Microsoft
Yup - the very first one is something I've been wanting for a couple of years!
this is a game changer for me. seriously.
That monitor control one sounds amazing as input select as a shortcut on both my work laptop and Desktop would make it so easy
POV: thiojoe is secretly sponsored by nirsoft
Thanks for another great video, this will help me in a lot! Thank you very much!
Thank you hero you're videos helped me to fix my computer after i lost hope
Seems to be a really good set.
Thanks.
Very helpful info.Thanks!
Nir is most likely (according to the name and small search on Google) from my country :-)
I did use in the past some of his tools but lately I didn't some are old some have other ways... BUT!
YOU JUST CHANGED MY LIFE!!!
I recently started making some videos with over the table view and I connect my camera to the second input of the PC, my monitor has some not so comfy touch buttons to switch inputs etc and I'd wish to have some better way, now thanks to you showing the "ControlMyMonitor" I'm gonna make those into a macro key on my keyboard!!!! Thanks!!!
I have a wireless modem from my cable internet provider( Sparklight ), and at times, the modem and/or my laptop goes offline for some reason. I suspect that someone has hacked my wireless signal, and is using my internet. I have found out from Sparklight that the modem isn't equipped to allow me to change my security key( password ). I wonder if there is a program which would encrypt my wireless signal between the modem and my laptop so no one can use it except me. A program which would allow me to detect whom is using my wireless signal would be great as well. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
You should have included the NirSoft Installer System (I don't know if it's exactly named like that, I'm almost exclusively on Linux since a year now),
It's an installer creator which many programs use for their installers, like e.g. IrfanView.
Only important for power users tho.
Very cool! IrfanView is my favorite freeware of all time, I use it as the default viewer on Linux too
@@srpenguinbr Me too!
NSIS????
@@Juliodax
I think it's called like that, yes...
@Felipe Lorenzzon
Me too! (the only problem is that it needs a while to start because Wine has to start first...)
Although that is very useful, it's originally by Nullsoft (the guys behind Winamp), not the hero of this video, Nir Sofer
I know I have some Nirsoft stuffs. Useful, 'nuff said.
Thiojoe, you're different than any other tech youtuber. Do vlogs man!
Been using since 2013. Majorgeeks is your friend.
The "nircmd" tool has an option called "setdefaultsounddevice" and using batch scripts, I can set the default system output device and input device. I did this because the Oculus software always sets itself to the default and there are times I want to go back and forth between using my headset and my desktop stuff. I just tell all of my software to use the system defaults and then change which are defaults when I need them!
I was using The Task view thingy, it stopped working with Windows 11. So now i use GUI prop view. Both by this dude.