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SysInternals apps in the Windows 11 Start menu. In the Windows 11 Start menu, the apps will be collected under a “Sysinternals Suite” item in “All apps”, as shown below. In the Windows 10 Start menu, the apps will appear individually in the full list of apps on your machine, as shown above. SysInternals apps in the Windows 10 Start menu. Once the installation is complete, the apps will simply appear in the Windows Start menu. (The Sysinternals Suite is completely free.) Click Install to install the suite of applications. You may need to click Get to actually “own” this app in the store. Sysinternals Suite in the Microsoft Store. (Screenshot: )Ĭlick on “Sysinternals Suite” when it appears.
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Searching the Microsoft Store for SysInternals. Open the Microsoft Store, and search for “SysInternals”. Now you can just install the entire suite, and it’ll be automatically kept up to date by Microsoft and Windows. I’ve long carried my copies of these tools with me, because without fail when diagnosing some issue or another I’d need one of them. Autoruns – this is the canonical tool for determining exactly what’s automatically running on your system every time you boot, sign-in, and more.
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Process Monitor – as the name implies, this tool monitors process activity, collecting data - often lots of data - about what’s happening on your system that you can filter and analyze to assist with diagnostic work.Process Explorer – something I’ve referred to as “Task Manager on steroids.” Even though Windows Task Manager has improved in recent years, Process Explorer still provides more detailed information about your system and the processes running on it.Originally a separate collection of tools, many years ago SysInternals was purchased and made part of Microsoft.
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As a bonus, they’ll be kept up to date automatically once installed. Sysinternals tools like Process Explorer and others can now be installed easily by finding the “Sysinternals Suite” in the Microsoft Store.
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