

Curiously, you don't have to restart Windows if you do it this way.Įdit: The latter method may look very different on Windows 10, sorry I missed that part. You may want to disable a bunch of other useless animations here, too, but don't disable the "Smooth edges of screen fonts". In the "Performance Options" window, on the "Visual Effects" tab, deselect the first option, "Animate controls and elements inside windows".In the "System Properties" window (don't you just love consistency?), go to the "Advanced" tab and click the "Settings" button in the first section, "Performance".Click the "Advanced system settings" in the top left.The other way is through the System Performance Settings.

Note that for Office 2016, the DWORD key is under HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\16.0\Common\Graphics and it should be called DisableAnimations (plural). Hit OK and exit the editor, then restart Windows for it to take effect. Finally, double-click the DisableAnimation value and change the value to 1.With the Graphics key selected, right-click on the right side of the editor and create a new DWORD value.CursorFX comes complete with several unique cursors installed. Easily apply skins, shadows, motion trails and sounds to your cursors. If there's no Graphics key under that Common key, right-click on the Common key and select New > Key. Animate cursors with special effects Listen to custom mouse click sounds Download thousands of cursors from Features Create stunning animated Windows mouse cursors for your PC with CursorFX.In regedit, navigate to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\15.0\Common.One is described in many places ( here, for one) and goes like this:
