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This tiny desktop habit will make you way faster on your PC

If you want one of the easiest, lowest-effort productivity upgrades you can make right now, this is it: level up your keyboard shortcut game. Navigating your PC and apps with keyboard shortcuts may not sound that worthwhile, but that time spent not clicking can lead to serious efficiency gains. Here’s the trick. Don’t try to memorize 50 shortcuts at once—that’s a surefire way to give up. Instead, pick just five that you’ll actually use, write them on a Sticky Note (physical or digital), and keep it visible on your desktop. Every time you hesitate or reach for your mouse, glance at the note and use the shortcut instead. Once you’ve mastered those five, swap in five new shortcuts. Rinse, repeat, and suddenly you’re a keyboard whiz, running circles around your former mouse-dependent self. Those tiny saved seconds add up in a big way, especially if you spend your day writing, editing, or bouncing between apps like I do. This method worked extremely well for me and I think it can apply to just about everyone. Why? Because it removes friction at a comfortable pace. You’re not relying on rote memorization, or memory palaces, or any of that stuff—unless that’s your thing, then go for it. This method slowly builds your knowledge and muscle memory over time, so it’s a reasonable, stress-free goal. Start small, stay consistent, and in a couple weeks you’ll wonder how you ever worked without them. Here are 10 Windows shortcuts I’d start with: Ctrl + C / Ctrl + V — Copy / Paste Ctrl + X — Cut Ctrl + Z — Undo Ctrl + Shift + T — Reopen closed tab Alt + Tab — Switch apps Win + D — Show desktop Win + Shift + S — Screenshot tool Ctrl + F — Find on page Ctrl + L — Jump to address bar Ctrl + W — Close tab If you want to go deeper, check out Microsoft’s full shortcut list . For more helpful app and productivity recommendations, be sure to subscribe to our PCWorld Try This newsletter.

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