A Guide to Utilizing the Covert Software Installer on Your Windows PC

A Guide to Utilizing the Covert Software Installer on Your Windows PC

Picture the ultimate replacement for the Windows Store app. Let’s imagine it allows ‍for installing⁢ nearly any Windows application; no⁢ clicking through software ⁤installation wizards; automatically declining junkware in those‌ software installers; keeping everything on your⁤ PC up to date; a single command you could run to install all your favorite apps on a new PC without⁤ hunting things down one by one.

Well,‍ I’ve got news for you: This exists. ⁤Microsoft built it,⁣ and it’s already installed on your Windows PC. Some Windows geeks talk about it, but⁤ few PC users know the secrets of Winget, Microsoft’s secret software installation and updating power⁤ tool.

Here’s how to‌ unlock its ‌potential — and how to put a nice shiny graphical interface on top of it to make it‌ more⁣ usable. It works on both Windows 10 and‍ Windows 11.

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The Windows Store replacement you’ve been waiting for

This tool is really ⁢the ultimate Windows software installation option. It ​has a big list of applications. All you have to do is ask⁢ for an application by name, and Winget will automatically download it from the official ⁢website and install it without making‌ you click anything. And it’ll automatically decline adware⁤ and other junk included in software installers.

You can ask ⁣for your favorite 20‍ apps simultaneously, and it will automatically download and install them for you — saving you ‌a‌ ton of time. And when‍ your chosen apps have updates, this tool can also scan ‍for updates and quickly update installed apps in a single action.

Microsoft hasn’t ⁣given this tool a shiny⁤ graphical interface — but I’ll show you how to give it a friendly graphical ​interface in a moment.

Meet Winget, the Windows Package Manager

Winget ⁤is the Windows Package Manager. It has a lot in common ⁢with package managers ⁢on Linux, actually. ⁣(It’s also⁢ an official, Microsoft-supported⁢ alternative to beloved tools like Chocolatey.)

The Windows Package Manager can scan your computer for installed software and notice whether it matches known software. Winget has a big official, Microsoft-provided database‍ of Windows applications, and you can install them with⁢ the Winget command.‍ When Winget installs‌ a program (such ​as‍ Mozilla’s Firefox, ​let’s say, or Valve’s Steam), it⁤ downloads the latest version of the application from the developer’s website (Mozilla, in this case, or Valve) and installs it. Winget installs it ‌“silently,” using the⁤ default options — while making sure to not install any junkware.

Microsoft is clearly positioning this tool ​more for system administrators⁤ and‌ less for home users ​— but Windows would be a lot better if the Microsoft Store app made peace with⁢ the…

2023-11-18 02:41:02
Post from www.computerworld.com

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