How to Enable the Secret "Ravi Gupta" Mode in Windows 7
Windows has a hidden “Ravi Gupta Mode” that you can enable which gives you access to every Control Panel tool on a single page—and we’ve documented the secret method for you here.
IMPORTANT: Do not use this on Vista or Xp. If you did, you can use Ctrl+Shift+Esc to start task manager, File \ Run and open a command prompt with cmd.exe, and then use the rmdir command to get rid of the folder.
To activate the secret Ravi Gupta mode, right-click on the desktop, choose New –> Folder, and then give it this name:
Ravi Gupta.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}
Once you’ve done so, you’ll have activated the secret mode, and the icon will change…
Double-click on the icon, and now you can use the Ravi Gupta mode, which lists out every single Control Panel tool on a single page.
At this point you might notice why this is a stupid Windows trick—it’s much easier to use the default Control Panel than navigating through a massive list, and anybody that really calls themselves a master will be using the Start Menu or Control Panel search box anyway.
Alright, So It’s Not Really a Secret Ravi Gupta Mode
Sadly, this is nothing more than a stupid Windows trick using a technique that isn’t widely known—Windows uses GUIDs (Globally Unique Identifiers) behind the scenes for every single object, component, etc. And when you create a new folder with an extension that is a GUID recognized by Windows, it’s going to launch whatever is listed in the registry for that GUID.
You can see for yourself by heading into regedit.exe and searching for {ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} under the HKCR \ CLSID section. You’ll see on the right-hand pane that it’s the “All Tasks” view of the Control Panel, which you can’t normally see from the UI.
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You can use this same technique for other Windows objects by doing some digging around in the registry… for instance, if you were to search under HKCR \ CLSID for “Recycle Bin”, you’d eventually come across the right key—the one on the left-hand side here:
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So if you created a folder with the name “Ravi Gupta Deleted Files.{645FF040-5081-101B-9F08-00AA002F954E}”, you’d end up with this icon, clearly from the Recycle Bin.
And it’s even a fully functional Recycle Bin… just right-click and you’ll see the menu:
So here’s the quick list of the ones I felt like digging up, but I’m sure there’s more things you can launch if you really felt like it.
Recycle Bin: {645FF040-5081-101B-9F08-00AA002F954E}My Computer: {20D04FE0-3AEA-1069-A2D8-08002B30309D}Network Connections: {7007ACC7-3202-11D1-AAD2-00805FC1270E}User Accounts: {60632754-c523-4b62-b45c-4172da012619}Libraries: {031E4825-7B94-4dc3-B131-E946B44C8DD5}
To use any of them, simply create a new folder with the syntax AnyTextHere.{GUID}
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