Simply since you’ve switched to Home windows 11 doesn’t imply you need to say goodbye to the acquainted look of Home windows 10. You may have the advantages of Home windows 11 with out giving up the outdated look, which is nice should you suppose the outdated look is extra interesting.
We beforehand confirmed you the way to convey again Home windows 10’s File Explorer in Home windows 11, however can one thing related be completed for all the pieces else? What concerning the Begin menu, the lock display, or sure apps?
Nicely, a free app referred to as RevertSV makes it attainable. With a single click on, you possibly can have the Home windows 10 design utilized to Home windows 11.
Not solely does RevertSV convey again the essential look of Home windows 10, however it additionally reverts a number of apps—most notably Paint and Notepad—to their older types. You may see it in motion within the video under:
Even the OS settings and Home windows Explorer look the identical as they did in Home windows 10. Nonetheless, some options are restricted or restricted, such because the compact view of File Explorer or the Snipping Instrument.
RevertSV is totally free and may be downloaded from the Web Archive. It isn’t meant to make any core modifications to the essential settings of Home windows 11; in different phrases, the modifications are solely beauty and your working system stays Home windows 11 by means of and thru.
Nonetheless, RevertSV hasn’t been extensively examined and it isn’t formally supported by Microsoft. Chances are you’ll run into errors, crashes, or different points, so it’s best to keep away from utilizing this software on any machine that you could’t afford to lose in case of catastrophic failure.
If you happen to simply need to mess around with it, contemplate testing RevertSV on a digital machine first. VMware Workstation Professional is now free and you may confer with our information to establishing digital PCs with it.
Additional studying: Good tweaks to make Home windows 11 extra productive
This text initially appeared on our sister publication PC-WELT and was translated and localized from German.