
Whether you've just bought a new PC, upgraded to Windows 7, or
reinstalled your OS, a just-installed system is a great opportunity to make some helpful changes and fixes. Here are the things we recommend anyone tackle on a minty fresh Windows.
We've previously rounded up the bulk of our Windows 7 advice, from first installation to fine detail tweaking, in our
complete guide to Windows 7, as well as packaged our favorite little utilities and customization apps in a
list of 10 booster apps. This guide, in contrast, doesn't include many downloads, and focuses on what one can do to fix up their system from the get-go, no separate app required.
10. Change Up Your Theme
9. Take Advantage of the Better Printer Setups

When Vista came out, it broke a lot of printer compatibility. Now that most manufacturers have had time to update drivers (and users had time to replace old printers), we can get the most from Windows 7's better printing tools. You can, for example,
make your computer change its default printer based on network connections, which can be a real boon to laptop warriors. You can also keep your XP systems connected on your network happily, as Windows 7 and XP can
share printers, as explained by the How-To Geek's own site. (Original post:
XP/7 sharing)
8. Extend Your Activation Period, If Necessary

You swear that you've never used this copy of Windows 7 before, or thought you'd deactivated the license on the system you
did use it on. For whatever reason your activation code isn't working, you can
give yourself 120 days to purchase one or get your act together otherwise.
7. Set Up XP Mode and Make It More Convenient
6. Get Your Old "Show Desktop" Button Back

To preview or show the desktop in Windows 7, you need to hover or click on the little translucent bar—that tiny strip there, in the far bottom right. Missing the old puffy-corner icon and a taskbar button to click on? The Tweaking with Vishal blog shows us
how to bring it back—kinda/sorta, actually, since you're really creating a small toolbar with just one button. Still, it's a popular tweak, and it helps ease the transition from Windows XP. (
Original post)
5. Integrate Dropbox with Your System
4. Organize and Customize Your Libraries

Windows 7's Libraries are one of the OS' neatest, most helpful features, but they don't go out of their way to explain themselves. Luckily, writer Mysticgeek at the How-To Geek's own site
wrote up a helpful Libraries how-to, detaling the adding and removing of files and folders and getting a grip on how to make them more convenient. If you'd rather handle your folders all by yourself, you can simply
disable libraries, too.
3. Set Up a Dual-Boot System
2. Learn the Shortcuts

Windows 7 has no shortage of shortcuts, like its predecessors, but this newest version of Microsoft's operating system does a lot more to put control of the windows, the new Taskbar, and other really great features into the tips of your fingers. Here's the
master list of new Windows 7 shortcuts. Read up, test them out, and learn them. Your fingers, hands, and emptying supply of free time will thank you.
1. Get Your Must-Have Apps Installed Quickly with Ninite (and the Lifehacker Pack)

You've probably got a set of free, downloadable apps you install on every system. Each of those apps has a license agreement, a usually redundant series of options to click through, and a wait while the app installs.
Ninite lets you pick out your apps from a web form, then download a customized installer that plugs all those apps into your system at once, no extra clicks needed. Which apps should you grab? We've got a
Lifehacker Pack full of suggestions, and a
page at Ninite pre-loaded with those picks.
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