That way, you will know what changes are being made to the registry.įirst, download this file. Interesting note: You can open any “.reg” file in Notepad to see what’s in it. Since there are quite a few registry changes you need to make, I created a simple “.reg” file that lets you do everything with just a few clicks. To get back the Windows Photo Viewer, you need to make a few registry changes. Use Winaero Teawker to enable Windows Photo Viewer in Windows 11 Enable Windows Photo Viewer in Windows 11.Enable Windows Photo Viewer in Windows 11.Check out the linked article for detailed instructions on how to do so. Use NirSoft's FileTypesMan to associate desktop programs with different file types. Microsoft blocks desktop programs from becoming the default (programs you can browse to on the local system), and suggests only some there. You can make Windows Photo Viewer the default viewer for images but you cannot use the Settings application for that. You need to restart the PC and should have Windows Photo Viewer as an option in the Open With menu and elsewhere on the operating system. Just extract the Registry file after the download and run the Registry file to add the information to the Registry. I tested the Registry file on Windows 10 version 1803 and the latest Insider Build of Windows 10 version 1809 and it worked on both. I have created the Registry file for your convenience but you can head over to the forum to create it yourself if you prefer it.ĭownload the following Registry file to your system: (Download Removed) The user Edwin over on Ten Forums published the code for the Registry that you need to add.
If you don't see the program listed there, you need to make a couple of changes to the Windows Registry to bring it back.
If you see it there, Windows Photo Viewer is installed and ready for use. Scroll down to see if the program is listed.Select "More apps" if Windows Photo Viewer is not listed.Right-click on any image on the Windows 10 machine and select Open With > Choose another app.Windows Photo Viewer should be available on devices that were upgraded from previous versions of Windows to Windows 10.ĭo the following to find out if that is indeed the case: RAM usage may go up to 400, 500 or even more Megabytes easily. This increases to a lot more when you don't open the image directly in Photos but go to the visual listing of all available photos instead. If you use both tools to display the same image, Photos uses about three times as much RAM as Windows Photo Viewer. Why you would want to use Windows Photo Viewer and not Photos? Easy: Photos uses a multiple of the memory that Windows Photo Viewer required to display images. Microsoft ships Windows Photo Viewer will clean installations of Windows as well but it is hidden and cannot be reactivated this easily.
Windows Photo Viewer is available as an option if the device was upgraded from an earlier version of Windows, e.g. Windows Photo Viewer is still available on Windows 10 devices but the program's accessibility depends on whether Windows 10 was clean-installed. Windows 10 users who worked on devices running previous versions of Windows or are still working on those devices may have used Windows Photo Viewer in the past to view images on these devices.