One benefit of Features on Demand is that installed features persist across Windows 10 version upgrades! Note that in some cases, you will need to manually uninstall dependencies. Also note that in some cases, uninstalling an RSAT tool may appear to succeed even though the tool is still installed. In this case, restarting the PC will complete the removal of the tool. See the list of RSAT tools including dependencies. Download the Remote Server Administration Tools for Windows 10 package that is appropriate for your computer's architecture.
You can either run the installer from the Download Center website, or save the download package to a local computer or share. When you are prompted by the Windows Update Standalone Installer dialog box to install the update, click Yes. Read and accept the license terms. Click I accept. Installation requires a few minutes to finish. NOTE: All tools are enabled by default. You do not need to open Turn Windows features on or off in Windows 10 to enable tools that you want to use.
Clear the check boxes for any tools that you want to turn off. Note that if you turn off Server Manager, the computer must be restarted, and tools that were accessible from the Tools menu of Server Manager must be opened from the Administrative Tools folder.
When you are finished turning off tools that you do not want to use, click OK. For more info, go to the Volume Licensing Service Center. Microsoft Office products. If you just purchased a new device that includes Office , we recommend redeeming installing Office before upgrading to Windows For more information, check How to upgrade to Windows 10 on new devices that include Office Using the tool to create installation media: Select Download tool now , and select Run.
If you agree to the license terms, select Accept. Any content on the flash drive will be deleted. ISO file. After the file is downloaded, you can go to location where the file is saved, or select Open DVD burner , and follow the instructions to burn the file to a DVD.
After the installation media is created, follow the steps below to use it. Restart your PC. On the Install Windows page, select your language, time, and keyboard preferences, and then select Next. Select Install Windows. Right-click the ISO file and select Mount. Double-click the ISO file to view the files within. Double-click setup. This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
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Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment. You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session. You signed out in another tab or window. Oct 5 Change many privacy settings to be off by default. Disable some data collection. Clean up the start menu for new user accounts. Remove a bunch of pre-installed apps, or all of them including. Create a more professional looking W10 experience.
Changes some settings no longer available via GPO for. Professional edition. I encourage you to. Each section is described with comments, to make it easier. Running from. Read through the script to see what is disabled, and comment out.
Single machine how-to:. Basic MDT how-to:. Join the Spiceworks Decrapifier community group on Spiceworks! This is the only place I post any updates to this script. Previous versions:. Switch Function. No switches Disables unnecessary services and scheduled tasks. Removes all UWP apps except for some useful ones. Disables Cortana, OneDrive, restricts default privacy.
Make sure this is. It can be tough to get the store back. Some apps may require these. Cannot be used with -SettingsOnly switch. Can be used with all the others. Leaves apps. Cannot be used with -AppsOnly switch. While waiting for the re-release of Windows 10 LTSC I am under a little time pressure to roll out 80 new computers for the faculty users at my college.
Then I create an autounattend. So, since that bootable USB drive has a writable install. Great article, this is exactly what I was looking for. Is there a way to install the Microsoft Store but make it hidden so that we can add apps if need be? If we can make it hidden but then run the exe from the location that would be great but still stuck at trying to run that as well. Thank you again for a great tutorial. This article really helped us in our school, because of the stupid login times on windows 10 for a new user.
The issue we are now facing is Windows Updates fail and machines every morning is reverting changes for about 20 minutes due to the failing updates, found out that disabling App Readiness is causing this. Has anyone else come across this and is there a way around this issue? Been looking around now for a few months and still getting nowhere. This is awesome. It was very frustrating considering it worked great with versions and below. But the bigger question remains…Why would MS force those apps on you in an Enterprise installation?
So annoying. Hi, Thanks. Quick Question, As I saw in your video also, some of the apps are not removed, they just show in start menu but are not listed in GUI from where v can remove it. You just unpinned them from start. How to make sure that they will not come in new user profile?
Thanks for all your stuff. Have you discovered or even tried a way to re-provision a UWP app? Say in your example you inadvertently removed Windows Calculator. Seems like you should be able to Add-AppxProvisionedPackage there is the cmdlet after all.
But I have not been successful with it. It almost seems you have to reinstall Windows 10 to get them back. New OS means making new App Layers. So I am searching for a way to re-provision a couple of UWP apps. All the other posts just repeat the same steps of removing appx packages for the current user by manually specifying the appx package id. I for the most part stick with the Windows Command Prompt cmd. I have tried to move folders many times using the move-item cmdlet and got access denied but it worked when I used the move command in Command Prompt so I actually did have NTFS Permissions to move the folder.
Using this script it is possible to completely remove an installed Appx Package from a Windows Install by removing the provisioned packages, the all user install packages and current user packages. This is somewhat dangerous though as by doing that, there is no way to get those packages back except though the Windows Store if they are available there.
Huh, after looking online, it appears that I used the wrong comment symbol in my PowerShell Script. Very cool research! Get yourself devxExec. There is a difference between what is provisioned i. New provisioned apps are sometimes added, obviously the user can uninstall them as well. They should be safe to remove.
Yes, but provisoned apps cannot be removed because the application is not under WindwosApp.. I checked the registry and the app is listed there, so for some reason the registry contains a stale entry. There are many references in the registry so removing it manually might break Get-AppxProvisionedPackage I tried. Just my luck. Please help. Thank you for your guides above, they have been most helpful as I learn how to build a Windows 10 base image for deployment to dissimilar hardware.
Please can you help me resolve this issue? Thanks for this.
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