
The Settings app is also slowly inheriting all Control Panel settings. Now that a few releases of Windows 10 have this new code, Microsoft must have decided to make the whole Windows 10 UI available in the Modern/"Universal" style only, removing all the classic features and options and replacing them with Metro equivalents. It was probably included only as a stopgap measure for compatibility purposes until the new XAML-based managed code UI was thoroughly tested. The mentioned Registry tweak does nothing.Īctually, this is not a surprise. The recent Windows 10 Redstone build released for Insiders, build 14291, does not have this option working any more. It looks like Microsoft decided to not include this legacy option in the upcoming Windows 10 Redstone update as it was an undocumented tweak probably. It was a native code implementation and one of the first tweaks I apply in Windows 10.


It also showed an analog clock for the current system time and additional analog clocks for 2 time zones. Personally, I preferred the old tray calendar, as it opened much faster than its Metro counterpart. "UseWin32Tra圜lockExperience"=dword:00000001Īfter doing this, the Metro calendar in the system tray changed its look from this: In short, the user could apply a simple Registry tweak: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

Previously, we wrote how to get the old Windows 7-like Calendar and Date pane in Windows 10.
