I spend a lot of time bouncing between macOS for music production, Linux for reviving older PCs, and Windows, where I get most of my work done. It’s my default environment, and over the years I’ve gotten pretty obsessive about smoothing out the rough edges. Not because Windows is unusable, but because it’s full of little bits of friction that add up fast. Search feels inconsistent, window management is good but not great, and too many things still take more clicks than they should.
There are also parts of Windows I just don’t love. The privacy trade-offs, the occasional forced workflows, and the steady push toward AI in places I didn’t ask for. But even with all that, it’s still my safe space. I know how it works, I know how to bend it, and with the right tools, I can make it feel a lot closer to what I actually want. These three free apps don’t replace Windows, they reshape how you interact with it. Each one targets a different friction point, and together they make Windows feel faster, cleaner, and more in line with how I actually work.
PowerToys fixes what Windows still gets wrong
The small system tweaks that remove everyday friction
PowerToys isn’t one app, it’s a collection of fixes for things Windows still hasn’t quite figured out. You don’t need all of it, and honestly, you shouldn’t try to use everything it offers. The value comes from picking a few tools that remove friction from the things you do every day.
Keyboard-first workflow with Keyboard Manager
For me, that starts with PowerToys Keyboard Manager. This is one of those tools that sounds simple until you actually start using it. Windows still doesn’t give you a great way to remap keys or customize shortcuts at a system level, and that’s a problem if you rely on muscle memory. With Keyboard Manager, I can remap keys I never use into ones I hit constantly, or fix shortcuts that just don’t make sense for how I work.
Batch renaming with PowerRename
Then there’s PowerRename, which fixes one of those long-standing Windows annoyances. Batch renaming files should be easy, but the built-in tools are still limited and clunky. PowerRename adds a simple, powerful way to rename large groups of files using search and replace, numbering, and patterns, all directly from the right-click menu. If you’ve ever had to clean up a folder full of messy file names, this saves a ton of time and removes a task that used to feel like a chore.
Faster, more robust search with PowerToys Run
PowerToys Run is Microsoft’s attempt to fix Windows search, and to its credit, it’s a big improvement over the default experience. It’s fast, keyboard-driven, and actually feels reliable when you’re launching apps or running quick commands. But once you get used to this style of search, it’s hard not to want something even more flexible, which is exactly where the next tool comes in.
Flow Launcher fixes Windows search and makes it feel fast
The faster, cleaner way to launch apps and find anything on your PC
Windows search has never really felt right to me. Sometimes it’s fast, sometimes it’s not, and too often it pulls in web results or random junk when I’m just trying to open an app or find a file. It’s something you use constantly, and when it’s slow or inconsistent, you feel it all day. It should be instant and predictable, but more often than not, it’s neither.
Flow Launcher fixes that. It replaces the default search with something fast, consistent, and built around the keyboard. You hit a shortcut, start typing, and it just works. Apps launch instantly, files show up when you expect them to, and plugins add things like calculations and quick commands that add solid functionality.
I Became a Windows Power User Overnight With This New Open-Source App from Microsoft
Command Palette will supercharge how you use your computer
I’ve tried other tools in this space, including Everything and even tools like Raycast, and they all get parts of this right. But Flow Launcher strikes the best balance on Windows without overcomplicating things. After a while, you stop using the Start menu and just launch everything this way, which makes Windows feel a lot more responsive.
GlazeWM replaces how you manage windows entirely
A different way to work on Windows, if you’re willing to learn it
I’ll be honest, GlazeWM isn’t something I instantly clicked with. It has a real learning curve, and the keyboard-first approach takes some getting used to if you’re coming from how Windows normally works. Instead of dragging windows around and constantly resizing things, GlazeWM uses a tiling layout where everything snaps into place automatically. You move, resize, and organize windows with keyboard shortcuts, and once you understand the basics, it starts to feel more structured and predictable than the default experience. I still tend to stick with tools like FancyZones for my day-to-day setup, but spending time with GlazeWM gave me a good sense of what’s possible if you want to go further.
The bigger shift is how it changes your workflow. You stop thinking about where windows should go and start focusing on what you’re actually doing. It’s a very different way to use Windows, and it won’t be for everyone. But if you’re willing to lean into it and push past the initial friction, this tool can actually make Windows feel like a different OS.
Why these tools make Windows feel different
None of these tools make Windows faster in the traditional sense. What they actually do is remove the small bits of friction you run into all day. PowerToys fixes the little things Windows still gets wrong, Flow Launcher makes finding and launching anything feel instant and reliable, and GlazeWM shows what’s possible when you stop managing windows manually altogether. On their own, each one is a solid upgrade. Together, they change how you interact with Windows.
That’s what makes Windows feel different. You’re not digging through menus, waiting on search, or constantly rearranging your workspace. You’re moving faster because the system is getting out of your way. You don’t have to use all three to see a benefit, but even adding one or two of these can make Windows feel a lot more like it’s working the way you want it to.

















