Top 10 Underhyped Windows Apps
Some apps are essential,
and everyone who's anyone knows to have them on their computer. Some
apps, however, are fantastic, yet fly under the radar. Today, we look at
our top 10 underhyped apps on Windows.
10. WizMouse
WizMouse
is that app you never knew you wanted until you use it. It allows you
to scroll in windows when you mouse over them, not just after you click
on them—something OS X and Linux have built-in, but Windows is
seemingly missing. It may seem trivial, but after using it for awhile,
you'll wonder how you ever lived without it. It'll even enable the mouse
wheel in applications that don't support it, or even reverse the
direction for the "natural" scrolling some people prefer. Check out our original post on it for more.
9. Skitch
Skitch isn't necessarily the best screenshot tool around, but it's long been our favorite screenshot annotation tool for the Mac, and now it's on Windows.
It's amazing what a few well-placed arrows, text, and shapes can do
when you're trying to explain something—and, while you could
just do it in Microsoft Paint, Skitch makes it look good (and easy). If
you use Evernote, the Evernote integration is pretty great too.
8. PotPlayer

You've probably heard of
PotPlayer before—after all, it's our App Directory pick for the best video player on Windows.
Despite that, however, it seems to be a much lesser-known app that
deserves more attention. It's fast, lightweight, and has more settings
for tweaking your video than you can shake a stick at (plus it can play
just about any video you throw at it). As such, it earns higher praise
from us than more popular players like VLC, at least if you want those
advanced settings. If you've been using another player and want more,
PotPlayer is where you'll find it.
7. Bins

Windows' taskbar is still the best taskbar around, but that doesn't mean it's perfect.
Bins
is a simple $5 app that adds a few really handy features to the
taskbar, most notably the ability to group multiple apps into one
square. Click on that square and it'll launch the primary app, but hover
over it, and you can choose which app to launch. It's perfect for those
that have multiple music players, photo editors, or other things that
you don't want taking up space on your taskbar. Check out our post on it to see even more stuff that it can do.
6. Chocolatey
Chocolatey brings Linux's lightning-fast, super configurable package management to Windows. What does that mean? It means you can install a ton of apps at once (perfect for clean installs)
with no effort. Or, you can try out that new app without having to find
its site, download the file, and install it yourself. Everything
happens with just a few keystrokes. Check out the video to the left to
see it in action.
5. Dexpot
Dexpot is an awesome little utility that adds a ton of features
to the windows on your desktop—and gives them all sorts of
shortcuts. Its main purpose is to split your desktop up into four
different workspaces, much like the Spaces feature on OS X or the
Workspaces feature on Ubuntu. It can also make windows transparent, give
you an Expose-like view of all your open windows, and more. If your
desktop is starting to feel a little cluttered with Windows, Dexpot is
the perfect app to save your productivity.
4. Growl

Growl is an incredibly popular program on the Mac, but its
Windows version
doesn't get a lot of attention—despite the fact that its
grown into quite the notification system. Growl essentially puts all the
popups, balloons, and other notifications on your desktop into one
unified system that you can control, customize, sent to other machines,
or even forward to your phone. It supports a ton of popular apps, and
it's very easy to set up. Check out our guide to Growl for Windows for more info.
3. MusicBee

At first glance,
MusicBee
seems like just another music player for Windows, but it's actually the
perfect balance between the existing programs out there. It's
fully-featured, like
Winamp, but much lighter weight, and 100% free. It's not
quite as customizable as
foobar2000, but is
much
easier to use, and has more than enough customization features for the
average user. It's even got a lot of tagging features for those that
might be considering something like
MediaMonkey. Plus, it syncs with Android phones superbly.
Does it beat out any of these players at their specialty features? No,
but it has a little bit of everything, is super lightweight, and is sure
to fit into anyone's workflow. If you haven't found a music player you
truly love, try it out. It was a contender in our Hive Five on desktop music players, but barely scraped together 6% of the final vote, so we're still considering it very underhyped.
2. Nircmd
Nircmd
isn't an "app" in the traditional sense of the word, but it's something
we think every life hacker should have on their Windows computer.
Essentially, Nircmd is a command line tool that performs all sorts of
system functions with really easy-to-understand commands. Sound boring?
Combine it with
AutoHotkey—one
of Windows' most deservedly hyped apps—and you can perform
nearly any system task with one keystroke. You can open or close your CD
drive, start your screensaver, put your computer to sleep, change the
volume, speak the text on the clipboard, kill instances of any program,
or perform over 70 other tasks. Check out
Nircmd's full list of features to see what it can do, and check out our guide to integrating it with AutoHotkey to really make it awesome.
1. OneNote

Microsoft's
note-taking application OneNote is one of those apps no one really
talks about much, but is absolutely loved by everyone who uses it. Heck,
you guys even voted it your favorite outlining tool, personal project management tool, and minutes meeting service, not to mention third place for best note taking app.
It's available for a ton of platforms, too (despite it being part of
Microsoft Office), so if you're finding that Evernote just isn't quite
powerful enough for your organizational needs, give OneNote a
shot—you might be surprised at everything it can do given its
lesser-known status.
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