Windows 11 vs macOS: Add AirDrop, Spotlight, Quick Look with PowerToys

Windows 11 users can add several macOS-style workflow features today by combining Microsoft PowerToys with built-in tools like Nearby Sharing and selective third-party utilities for file transfer, hot corners, previewing, search, and bulk renaming. The more interesting story is not that Windows lacks exact Apple equivalents, but that Microsoft has left too many daily-productivity niceties scattered across optional downloads, legacy dialogs, and uneven system surfaces. macOS wins here less by inventing magic than by making small accelerators feel native, predictable, and close at hand.

Side-by-side macOS-style workflow and Windows 11 PowerToys tool panels on a blue desktop.Apple’s Advantage Is Not the Feature List, It Is the Default​

The familiar Windows-versus-macOS debate usually collapses into market share, gaming support, hardware choice, or ecosystem lock-in. Windows dominates the PC world by breadth; macOS wins loyalty by restraint. But the five features called out in BGR’s comparison — AirDrop, Spotlight, Quick Look, Hot Corners, and richer batch renaming — expose a narrower and more useful truth: Apple has historically been better at turning repetitive desktop motions into low-friction habits.
None of these ideas is conceptually difficult. Send a file to a nearby device. Press a key combo and find an app or document. Preview a file without launching a full application. Throw the pointer into a corner to trigger an action. Rename a pile of files according to a pattern. These are not grand platform shifts; they are seconds shaved from operations people perform dozens of times a week.
Windows 11 can do versions of nearly all of this. In some cases, it can do more. The problem is that the best answers often live outside the clean, default path. You install PowerToys. You enable a module. You remember a non-obvious shortcut. You learn that one sharing option works for Windows PCs, another works for Android phones, and another depends on OneDrive or Phone Link. Microsoft’s ecosystem has the ingredients, but Apple’s pitch is simpler: the good workflow is already waiting for you.
That distinction matters because modern desktop operating systems are no longer judged only by whether they can run the right applications. For power users and administrators, the operating system is also judged by how much fiddling it demands before it gets out of the way.

AirDrop’s Real Trick Is Trust, Not Radio Magic​

AirDrop’s appeal is often described as if Apple discovered some exotic wireless technique that Microsoft never learned. That misses the point. The brilliance of AirDrop is not merely that it transfers files over local wireless connections; it is that discovery, identity, consent, and transfer are wrapped into a flow that ordinary users can understand without learning network sharing.
Windows 11 has Nearby Sharing, and it is better than many users remember. It can share documents, photos, links, and other content with nearby Windows devices using Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, and recent Windows 11 builds have improved the Wi-Fi side of the experience when machines are on the same private network. For households and small offices where the target device is another Windows PC, it is worth turning on before installing anything else.
The catch is that Nearby Sharing is not AirDrop for the mixed-device world most people actually inhabit. AirDrop moves between Macs, iPhones, and iPads because those devices participate in a tightly controlled identity and hardware ecosystem. Windows, by design and by market reality, has to coexist with Android, iOS, corporate policy, OEM utilities, Microsoft accounts, local accounts, domain accounts, and machines built across a decade of wireless chipsets.
That is why the Windows answer quickly becomes plural. Nearby Sharing is the Windows-to-Windows answer. Phone Link helps in the Windows-and-Android lane, especially for Samsung and other supported devices. Google’s Quick Share for Windows is the more AirDrop-like answer for Android phones and Windows PCs. OneDrive is the cloud-mediated answer when proximity does not matter. SMB shares are the old-school answer when an admin wants deterministic behavior on a LAN.
That menu is powerful, but it is not elegant. The average user does not want to choose between four mental models for “send this file over there.” The admin does, perhaps, but even the admin wants fewer support tickets.
Microsoft’s best move would be to make the Share sheet in Windows 11 more honest and more ambitious. Rather than pretending Nearby Sharing alone solves the problem, Windows should surface local Windows PCs, paired Android devices, OneDrive targets, and organization-approved destinations in a single predictable hierarchy. AirDrop is a feature; what Windows needs is a coherent sharing fabric.

Spotlight Shows How Much Damage a Bad Search Habit Can Do​

Spotlight remains one of macOS’s most durable advantages because it understands that search is not only about documents. It is a launcher, calculator, dictionary, file finder, settings shortcut, and web starting point. More importantly, it is fast enough that users build muscle memory around it.
Windows Search has had years to become that interface, and parts of it are genuinely useful. Press the Windows key, type an app name, and launch. Search settings. Find files. Pull web results if you want them. Yet the experience still feels split between a productivity tool and a traffic director for Microsoft services. Depending on configuration, indexing state, account status, and network conditions, Windows Search can feel either immediate or strangely heavy.
This is where PowerToys changes the conversation. PowerToys Run, and more recently Command Palette, represent Microsoft’s clearest acknowledgment that power users want a keyboard-first command surface that behaves more like Spotlight or the command palettes found in modern developer tools. Command Palette can launch apps, invoke commands, and extend into additional workflows. It is the sort of feature that makes Windows feel less like a pile of entry points and more like an instrument.
But the word “PowerToys” is doing too much work. A feature this central should not feel like an enthusiast add-on. Microsoft has spent years refining the Windows 11 Start menu, taskbar, widgets surface, Copilot integration, and search box placement. Yet the fastest and cleanest answer for many users is still to install an optional utility maintained under the PowerToys banner.
That says something uncomfortable about Windows 11’s priorities. Microsoft knows how to build the tool power users want; it has, in fact, built it. The missing step is treating that tool as a first-class part of the desktop rather than a side project for people who already know where to look.
For WindowsForum readers, the practical answer is simple: install PowerToys, enable Command Palette, and spend time with its shortcuts before judging it. The strategic answer is more pointed: Windows Search should learn from Command Palette, not compete with it.

Quick Look Wins Because It Respects the User’s Attention​

Quick Look is one of those macOS features that sounds minor until you use a machine without it. Select a file, press the spacebar, and preview it. Images, PDFs, documents, videos, and many other file types become inspectable without committing to an application launch or breaking the flow of browsing through a folder.
Windows 11 has preview panes, thumbnails, and app-specific handlers, but the experience is inconsistent. File Explorer can show useful previews for some formats, and the Details pane has improved, but it still does not deliver the same quick, modal, keyboard-driven inspection habit that macOS users expect. Opening a file to see whether it is the right file remains more common than it should be.
PowerToys Peek is Microsoft’s strongest answer. It brings a Quick Look-style preview experience to Windows, letting users inspect selected files without fully opening them in their associated applications. For users who sort through screenshots, PDFs, logs, media files, or design assets, Peek is one of those utilities that becomes obvious in hindsight. Once it is part of the workflow, the old way feels wasteful.
The enterprise angle is also worth noticing. Preview behavior is not merely convenience; it affects risk. Users opening unknown attachments or unfamiliar files in full applications create more opportunities for accidental execution, macro prompts, or app-level exposure. A controlled preview surface does not eliminate that risk, but it can reduce the number of unnecessary application launches in day-to-day triage.
Again, the critique is not that Windows cannot do it. The critique is that users have to know the better behavior exists. PowerToys Peek should be the prototype for a native File Explorer preview command with clear security boundaries, consistent file-type support, and a default shortcut users can discover without reading a blog post.

Hot Corners Reveal the Philosophical Split Between Windows and macOS​

Hot Corners are divisive. Some users love the ability to shove the pointer into a corner and trigger Mission Control, show the desktop, start the screen saver, or open Launchpad. Others disable them immediately after one accidental activation too many. But their presence in macOS reflects a broader Apple instinct: screen edges and corners are not dead space; they are targets.
Windows has flirted with edge-based interaction for decades, from the Start button’s bottom-left gravity to Windows 8’s charms and hot corners. The Windows 8 era also explains why Microsoft may be cautious. Edge gestures became associated with confusion, especially for mouse-and-keyboard users who did not want tablet metaphors invading the desktop. Windows 11, by contrast, is conservative around corners.
That conservatism leaves a gap for users who like spatial triggers. Third-party utilities such as WinXCorners and similar tools can reproduce some macOS-style Hot Corner behavior on Windows, while other automation tools can approximate it with mouse position triggers and scripts. PowerToys does not currently provide a direct Hot Corners module in the same way it provides Peek or PowerRename, although its broader set of mouse and window-management utilities often solves adjacent problems.
This is one area where Windows users should be selective rather than nostalgic. Hot Corners are useful when the action is low-risk and reversible: show desktop, reveal windows, lock screen, launch a search overlay. They are much less appealing when they trigger disruptive actions on multi-monitor workstations, remote sessions, shared kiosks, or gaming rigs.
The absence of native Hot Corners in Windows 11 may be less a failure than a design choice. But it would still be useful for Microsoft to offer an optional, policy-controllable implementation. The feature belongs in Accessibility or Personalization, not in the mandatory desktop path. Give enthusiasts the spatial shortcuts; give admins the Group Policy switch to disable them.

PowerRename Is the Windows Feature That Already Beats the Mac for Some Jobs​

Batch renaming is the least glamorous feature in the BGR list, but it may be the most revealing. macOS Finder has a clean built-in rename tool that lets users replace text, add text, or apply a format to multiple selected files. It is approachable, obvious, and good enough for many photo sets, project folders, and document batches.
Windows 11 can rename multiple files natively, but the built-in behavior is crude. Select a group, rename one file, and Windows will apply a numbered pattern. That is fine for “Vacation (1), Vacation (2), Vacation (3)” and poor for almost everything else. Anyone who has had to normalize hundreds of filenames knows the difference between a convenience and a tool.
PowerToys PowerRename is the real Windows answer. It supports search-and-replace operations, regular expressions, previews, case transformations, and more careful control over filenames and extensions. In the hands of an IT pro, developer, photographer, or data wrangler, it is not merely a macOS catch-up feature. It can be the more powerful instrument.
The irony is that PowerRename demonstrates both the strength and weakness of Microsoft’s current approach. Windows has a first-party, free, open-source utility that solves the problem well. It integrates into the shell. It is mature enough to recommend broadly. But because it is packaged as part of PowerToys, many ordinary users never encounter it, and many managed environments treat it as another optional installation requiring approval.
There is a reasonable argument for keeping advanced rename features out of the default File Explorer UI. Regular expressions and bulk extension changes can frighten casual users and create support problems. But there is no good argument for the current gulf between the primitive built-in multi-rename behavior and the much better Microsoft-made tool sitting one install away.
A smarter File Explorer would offer a basic batch rename dialog by default and expose PowerRename-grade controls behind an “advanced” expansion. That would preserve approachability while admitting that modern file work often involves patterns, metadata, and cleanup at scale.

PowerToys Has Become the Shadow Roadmap for Windows​

The deeper lesson in all five comparisons is that PowerToys has become more than a nostalgia brand. It is now a parallel product laboratory for the Windows desktop. FancyZones addresses window layouts more aggressively than the stock Snap experience. Text Extractor fills gaps in everyday OCR. Keyboard Manager solves remapping needs. Peek, PowerRename, Mouse Without Borders, and Command Palette all answer real workflow demands that Windows itself only partially addresses.
That is healthy in one sense. PowerToys gives Microsoft a faster channel for enthusiast utilities without forcing every experiment into Windows proper. It lets features evolve in public, with feedback from users who actually care about workflow. For administrators, it also creates a useful distinction between the supported operating system baseline and optional power-user tooling.
But the arrangement is also a confession. If enough users install the same utility immediately after setting up Windows, the utility is no longer merely optional. It is compensating for the platform. At that point, Microsoft has to decide whether PowerToys is a toolbox, an incubator, or a permanent holding pen for features the Windows team does not want to own.
The answer may vary by module. Some PowerToys features should remain enthusiast-grade. Others deserve promotion. Command Palette, Peek, and a simplified PowerRename are the obvious candidates for deeper integration because they improve fundamental OS tasks: finding, inspecting, and organizing.
This is where Apple’s vertically integrated model gives macOS an editorial advantage. Apple can decide that a behavior belongs in the operating system and make it feel inevitable. Microsoft often has to support more hardware, more workflows, and more institutional caution. Still, complexity is not an excuse for burying good ideas.

Windows 11 Users Can Steal the Best Parts Without Pretending to Own a Mac​

The practical path for Windows 11 users is not to turn the desktop into a macOS clone. That usually ends badly. The goal is to identify which Apple-style workflows are actually useful and implement them in ways that respect Windows’ strengths: openness, configurability, hardware variety, and enterprise manageability.
For file sharing, start with the ecosystem you actually use. If your world is mostly Windows PCs, enable Nearby Sharing and test it on your network before assuming it is useless. If Android phones are involved, install and configure Quick Share for Windows where policy allows. If you are already paying for Microsoft 365, OneDrive may be the least exciting but most reliable answer, especially across distance and device types.
For Spotlight-style launching, PowerToys Command Palette is the obvious first stop. It is not merely an app launcher; it is a sign of where Windows productivity should go. Users who live at the keyboard will get more from it than from yet another Start menu tweak.
For Quick Look-style previews, PowerToys Peek is the feature to enable and teach. The behavior is easy to understand, immediately useful, and low drama. It is also the sort of thing that changes how people move through folders, because previewing no longer feels like a context switch.
For Hot Corners, be more careful. If you miss the macOS behavior, a lightweight third-party tool can fill the gap, but this is not a feature to deploy casually across managed fleets. Test it on multi-monitor setups, remote-desktop workflows, and systems used for presentations before calling it a win.
For batch renaming, PowerRename is the clear recommendation. It is one of the best examples of Windows having a stronger power-user answer than macOS, provided the user knows it exists.

The Five Fixes Say More About Microsoft Than About Apple​

The BGR list works because it names features people can immediately picture. But the larger Windows 11 critique is not that Microsoft forgot to copy Apple. It is that Microsoft too often ships workflow improvements as fragments: a shell feature here, a PowerToy there, a Store app somewhere else, a cloud service in the Share menu, and a redesigned surface that may or may not connect the pieces.
Windows users are accustomed to that sprawl. Many even like it, because sprawl creates choice. A sysadmin can standardize one tool, a developer can script another, and an enthusiast can replace half the shell if they want to. That flexibility is a competitive advantage.
But flexibility becomes tax when common tasks require folklore. “Install this Microsoft utility that is not really part of Windows, enable this module, change this shortcut, and ignore the built-in version” is not a great answer for a platform used by hundreds of millions of people. It is acceptable for power users; it is poor product design for everyone else.
The healthiest future for Windows is not macOS imitation. It is curation. Microsoft should look at the PowerToys modules with broad, repeated appeal and graduate the least controversial ones into Windows proper, while leaving the more specialized tools in the enthusiast kit. That would preserve PowerToys as an innovation channel without forcing ordinary users to discover basic productivity features by accident.
The opportunity is especially important now because Windows 11 is competing for attention with its own AI ambitions. Copilot and cloud intelligence may become useful parts of the desktop, but they do not replace the small rituals that make an operating system feel fast. A user who cannot quickly preview a PDF, rename 200 files intelligently, or send a photo to a nearby device will not be comforted by another AI button.

The Mac Envy Checklist for a Better Windows 11 Setup​

For all the philosophical noise, the immediate prescription is refreshingly concrete. Windows 11 users can close most of the gap in an afternoon, and IT teams can decide which of these improvements are safe enough to standardize.
  • Install Microsoft PowerToys if your device policy allows it, because Command Palette, Peek, and PowerRename address three of the five macOS-style gaps directly.
  • Use Nearby Sharing for Windows-to-Windows transfers, but do not expect it to replace AirDrop across iPhones, iPads, Android phones, and PCs.
  • Add Google Quick Share for Windows when Android-to-PC transfers are the real problem, especially in households or teams where phones are part of the daily workflow.
  • Enable PowerToys Peek for fast file previews, because it changes File Explorer from an open-and-close workflow into a scan-and-act workflow.
  • Use PowerRename for serious batch renaming, because Windows’ built-in multi-file rename remains too limited for structured work.
  • Treat Hot Corners as a personal customization rather than a fleet default, since accidental triggers and multi-monitor behavior can outweigh the convenience.
The lesson is not that Windows 11 is doomed to trail macOS in everyday polish. It is that Microsoft already has many of the answers, but too many of them live one layer outside the operating system’s front door. If Windows is going to feel modern in the places where users actually spend their time, Microsoft should stop treating these small accelerators as enthusiast extras and start treating them as the connective tissue of the desktop.

References​

  1. Primary source: bgr.com
    Published: Sat, 06 Jun 2026 09:17:00 GMT
  2. Official source: learn.microsoft.com
  3. Official source: support.microsoft.com
  4. Related coverage: windowscentral.com
  5. Related coverage: makeuseof.com
  6. Related coverage: howtogeek.com
  1. Related coverage: techradar.com
  2. Related coverage: pcgamer.com
 

Windows 11 users can add several macOS-style workflow features in June 2026 by combining Microsoft PowerToys with third-party utilities such as LocalSend, QuickLook, and WinXCorners, effectively filling gaps around local file sharing, launcher search, file previews, screen-corner actions, and batch renaming. The larger story is not that Windows cannot do these things, but that Microsoft still leaves too many power-user conveniences scattered across add-ons, Store apps, and community tools. macOS wins mindshare here because its small efficiencies feel native, predictable, and designed as part of one system. Windows can match much of the function, but the polish still has to be assembled.

Split screen graphic comparing macOS and Windows 11 workflows, highlighting macOS features and PowerToys.Windows Has the Market, but macOS Still Owns the Little Rituals​

Windows 11 is not short on features. It has virtual desktops, Snap Layouts, clipboard history, Phone Link, widgets, Copilot hooks, a modern terminal, and more system-management surface area than most home users will ever touch. Yet the features people miss from macOS are rarely the headline features Apple advertises on keynote slides.
They are the little rituals. Select a file and tap Space. Throw a photo from an iPhone to a Mac without thinking about protocols. Flick the pointer into a corner and make the desktop obey. Type into Spotlight and trust that the machine understands whether you meant an app, a document, a calculation, or a setting.
That is where Apple’s advantage still bites. macOS is good at making a handful of high-frequency actions feel like muscle memory. Windows, by contrast, often has the ingredients but not the ceremony.
Microsoft’s answer, increasingly, is PowerToys. The revived utility suite has become a kind of unofficial laboratory for Windows features that are too useful to ignore but not yet absorbed into the operating system’s default experience. That makes PowerToys both a gift and an indictment: it proves Windows can be shaped into a faster, more Mac-like environment, while also reminding users that they have to go looking for the pieces.

AirDrop Is Really an Ecosystem Feature, Not a File-Transfer Feature​

AirDrop is the most obvious missing piece because it is not merely a way to move files. It is a promise that nearby devices belonging to the same broad computing life can recognize one another and exchange data without ceremony. For Apple users, that promise stretches across iPhone, iPad, and Mac in a way that feels almost boring when it works — which is precisely the point.
Windows has never had a direct equivalent with the same cultural weight. Microsoft’s Nearby Sharing can move files between nearby Windows PCs using Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, and Windows also has long-standing Bluetooth file-transfer plumbing. But the experience is narrower than AirDrop and less compelling in mixed-device households, especially where an iPhone, Android phone, Windows desktop, and work laptop all coexist on the same desk.
That mixed-device reality is the modern problem. The old assumption that a user lives entirely inside one vendor’s hardware stack is increasingly false for enthusiasts and IT pros. The more realistic home setup is a Windows gaming desktop, a corporate Windows notebook, an Android phone or iPhone, maybe an iPad, perhaps a Linux box, and a NAS somewhere humming in the corner.
LocalSend succeeds because it accepts that mess instead of pretending it does not exist. It is a free, open-source, cross-platform app that sends files across the local network, with clients for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS. It does not recreate AirDrop at the operating-system level, but it recreates enough of the why is this not just built in? feeling to become part of the daily toolkit.
The limitation matters. LocalSend generally expects devices to be on the same local network, so it is not a universal replacement for cloud sharing, OneDrive links, or enterprise-managed transfer systems. Firewalls, guest Wi-Fi isolation, VPN clients, and corporate endpoint policies can also spoil the party. But when the devices can see each other, LocalSend often feels closer to what Windows should have shipped for cross-platform homes years ago.
For Windows users, the practical setup is straightforward: install LocalSend on the PC and on the other device, open the sending tab, choose the file, select the recipient, and approve the transfer. The magic is not that this is technically exotic. The magic is that it removes the familiar dance of emailing yourself a screenshot, plugging in a cable, waiting for cloud sync, or digging through a phone’s file-transfer mode.

Spotlight’s Real Rival Is Not Windows Search​

Spotlight is often described as search, but that undersells it. On a Mac, Spotlight is a launcher, calculator, file finder, dictionary doorway, web prompt, and general-purpose command surface. Its value comes from being available everywhere, instantly, without dragging the user back to a Start menu or a browser tab.
Windows Search has improved over the years, but it still carries baggage. It is tied to the Start experience, it has had a complicated relationship with web results and advertising-like recommendations, and its file-search behavior can feel inconsistent depending on indexing, OneDrive state, and where the user stores things. For many power users, Windows Search is something to tolerate rather than trust.
PowerToys Run is the closest Windows-native-adjacent answer. Once PowerToys is installed and PowerToys Run is enabled, the familiar Alt+Space shortcut opens a floating launcher that behaves much more like Spotlight. It can start applications, find files and folders, run simple calculations, execute system commands, and surface active processes.
That last bit is important because it changes the mental model. The Start menu is a place. PowerToys Run is an action. When a launcher appears as an overlay on top of whatever you are doing, it becomes part of the workflow rather than an interruption to it.
Microsoft has also been evolving this idea through PowerToys’ newer command-surface work, including the Command Palette direction that points toward a richer keyboard-first interface. The naming and packaging may shift over time, but the user demand is stable: Windows needs a fast, systemwide command box that is not polluted by indecision about whether it is a local tool, a web portal, or a monetization surface.
For now, PowerToys Run is the recommendation that makes sense. It is lightweight enough for daily use, flexible enough for enthusiasts, and official enough that administrators are more likely to tolerate it than a random launcher from the darker corners of the download web. It also shows how much Windows can improve when Microsoft stops trying to make every interaction begin with the Start menu.

Quick Look Proves That Previewing Is a First-Class Action​

Quick Look is one of those macOS features that sounds minor until you lose it. Select a PDF, image, document, or media file, hit Space, and inspect it without committing to opening an application. For people who sort downloads, review screenshots, compare documents, or triage folders full of media, previewing is not a luxury; it is a navigation method.
Windows File Explorer has a Preview Pane, and for some workflows it is perfectly serviceable. But it is not the same. It consumes layout space, depends on handlers, and feels like part of File Explorer rather than a systemwide reflex. Quick Look’s advantage is immediacy: the user asks for a temporary glance, gets it, and returns to the folder without ceremony.
PowerToys Peek brings that behavior closer to Windows. Enable Peek, select a file, and trigger the preview shortcut. It opens a temporary preview window so the user can inspect content without launching the full associated app. When handling multiple files, users can move through them more quickly than they would by opening each item in its default application.
There is also the third-party QuickLook app, which has long existed to scratch this exact itch on Windows. Its appeal is obvious: install it, select a file, press Space, and get a macOS-like preview habit on a Windows machine. Depending on file types and personal preference, some users may prefer QuickLook’s behavior over PowerToys Peek, while others will choose the Microsoft-maintained utility for simplicity and trust.
The distinction is less important than the underlying point. Previewing is not just a file-manager feature. It is a cognitive shortcut. Every time Windows makes users open a full application just to confirm whether a file is the right one, the operating system is charging a small attention tax.
For IT departments, this is also where defaults matter. A sanctioned PowerToys deployment may be easier to defend than a patchwork of small utilities, especially on managed devices. But for personal machines, the calculation is simpler: if you spend time hunting through files, add a Quick Look-style previewer and stop wasting clicks.

Hot Corners Are a Small Feature With a Big Philosophy​

Hot Corners are polarizing. Some users consider them essential; others accidentally trigger them once and immediately want them gone. Apple’s implementation works because it is tucked into settings, optional, and powerful enough for people who build their desktop habits around pointer movement.
The feature turns the corners of the display into triggers. Move the pointer into one corner and the system can show the desktop, launch Mission Control, open Notification Center, start a screen saver, or perform another configured action. It is not revolutionary, but it is fast in the way old-school desktop features are fast: no animation-heavy assistant, no cloud dependency, no AI framing, just a direct command mapped to a physical gesture.
Windows 11 has gestures, taskbar affordances, keyboard shortcuts, and Snap behavior, but it does not offer a comparable native Hot Corners feature. That omission is odd because Windows has always served users who love spatial muscle memory. The taskbar corner, system tray, Start button, and desktop edges have mattered for decades.
WinXCorners fills the gap for users who want that behavior. It is a lightweight third-party utility that assigns actions to screen corners, bringing some of the macOS feel to Windows desktops. Typical uses include showing the desktop, launching a screen saver, or opening system surfaces.
The obvious caution is that corner-trigger utilities sit close to the user’s input flow. They should be downloaded from the project’s legitimate release page, kept current, and avoided on tightly managed corporate systems unless approved. Anything that hooks desktop behavior deserves more scrutiny than a wallpaper app.
Still, Hot Corners are a useful reminder that productivity is not always about adding larger tools. Sometimes it is about shaving half a second from an action performed fifty times a day. Windows has the keyboard shortcuts; what it lacks is the same willingness to make pointer geography programmable for ordinary users.

Batch Renaming Shows Why PowerToys Still Matters​

Windows can batch rename files. Select a group, press F2, type a name, and Windows appends numbers. That is fine if all you need is “Vacation (1)” through “Vacation (42).” It is not fine if you need to replace a phrase, standardize a naming convention, alter capitalization, preserve part of the original name, or preview a complex change before committing it.
macOS has long offered a more capable built-in rename workflow. Finder lets users replace text, add text, or format names across multiple selected files with more control than Windows File Explorer’s basic numbering trick. This is the kind of feature that rarely appears in platform marketing but saves real time for photographers, writers, developers, sysadmins, and anyone who receives badly named exports from another system.
PowerRename, included in PowerToys, is the Windows answer. Once enabled, it appears in the context menu for selected files and folders. Users can search and replace strings, apply regular expressions, alter casing, preview results, and then commit the rename operation.
The preview is the crucial safeguard. Batch renaming is one of those tasks where a small mistake can create a large cleanup job. Being able to see old and new names side by side before applying a change turns a risky operation into a controlled one.
For IT pros, PowerRename also has a familiar administrative flavor. It is not a replacement for PowerShell when scripting large file operations, but it covers the middle ground beautifully: too repetitive for manual renaming, too casual to justify writing and testing a script. That middle ground is where many real desktop tasks live.
This is why PowerToys remains so valuable. It gives Windows a sanctioned route for features that advanced users need before the Windows shell team is ready to make them part of the default operating system. The downside is that a feature like PowerRename feels mature enough that one has to ask why File Explorer still does not offer something comparable out of the box.

The Pattern Is Not Missing Features, but Missing Integration​

Looking across these five examples, the pattern is hard to miss. Windows 11 can be made to behave more like macOS, but the improvements arrive through a combination of Microsoft sidecar utilities and third-party projects. The result can be excellent, but it is assembled rather than inherited.
That assembly model has advantages. Windows users get choice. They can decide whether they prefer LocalSend, Quick Share, OneDrive, SMB shares, Phone Link, or a Synology workflow. They can choose PowerToys Peek or QuickLook. They can ignore Hot Corners entirely if they find them annoying.
But choice has a cost, and Windows users pay it in configuration time. Every missing native feature becomes a small research project: which utility is trustworthy, which version is current, which permissions does it need, does it run at startup, does it survive updates, will it anger endpoint security, and how does it behave on a work machine versus a personal one?
Apple’s advantage is not that every implementation is perfect. AirDrop can be temperamental, Spotlight can miss things, and Quick Look depends on file support. The advantage is that these features belong to the operating system’s default grammar. Users do not have to discover an ecosystem of utilities before the machine starts feeling coherent.
Microsoft seems to understand this in pieces. PowerToys is official, widely respected, and increasingly polished. Windows 11 has also steadily absorbed ideas that once required third-party tools, from better window snapping to terminal improvements. Yet Microsoft still tends to treat many power-user niceties as optional enhancements rather than as the connective tissue of the desktop.
That is a strategic choice. Windows must serve enterprise fleets, budget laptops, gaming rigs, kiosks, classrooms, developers, and home users who never open Settings unless something is broken. Microsoft is understandably cautious about adding new default behaviors that might confuse or disrupt. But caution can become stagnation when the competition’s “small” features become the reason users describe one platform as smoother.

The Security Trade-Off Hiding Under the Convenience​

There is another reason Windows does not simply clone every macOS convenience: the Windows ecosystem is messier, more open, and more heavily targeted. A cross-device sharing system is not just a productivity feature; it is a trust boundary. A launcher is not just a search box; it can expose files, commands, and web actions. A previewer is not just a viewer; it parses untrusted content.
That does not mean users should avoid these tools. It means they should understand what they are installing. PowerToys has the benefit of Microsoft stewardship and open-source development, which makes it easier to recommend. LocalSend’s open-source model and local-network design are also strong points, particularly compared with opaque file-transfer services that route everything through someone else’s cloud.
Third-party utilities still require discipline. Download from official project pages or reputable stores. Keep them updated. Avoid abandoned tools that hook deeply into the shell. Be cautious on corporate devices, where even benign utilities can violate policy or create support headaches.
This is especially relevant for WinXCorners and similar desktop-behavior tools. They may be lightweight, but they interact with input and shell behavior in ways that security software may notice. On a personal PC, that is a manageable trade. In an enterprise environment, it is a conversation with IT.
The same goes for file-transfer tools. Local-only transfer can be more private than cloud upload, but it also depends on the safety of the local network and the user’s judgment about accepting incoming files. The convenience of AirDrop-style sharing always comes with the need to know who is on the other end.
The best Windows setup, then, is not the one with the most utilities installed. It is the one with the fewest trusted utilities that remove the most friction. PowerToys plus one or two carefully chosen tools is a sane approach. A dozen shell hacks from random download sites is not.

Microsoft Should Stop Treating Power Users as an Aftermarket​

The bigger criticism of Windows 11 is not that users have no solution. They do. The criticism is that many of the best solutions feel like aftermarket parts bolted onto a platform that should have learned these lessons years ago.
PowerToys is wonderful, but it is also a holding pen. FancyZones helped prove there was demand for richer window management before Windows 11 made snapping more visible. PowerRename has proved that bulk file operations belong closer to the shell. PowerToys Run and Command Palette work suggest that users want a keyboard-first command surface with more dignity than the Start menu search box often provides.
At some point, the successful experiments should graduate. Not every PowerToy belongs in Windows by default, but the core ideas behind Run, Peek, and PowerRename are no longer fringe. They are table-stakes refinements for a mature desktop operating system.
There is precedent for this. Microsoft has repeatedly folded enthusiast ideas into the mainstream once they proved durable. The problem is tempo. Apple’s desktop experience feels cohesive because features like Quick Look and Spotlight have had years to become part of the platform’s identity. Windows too often leaves equivalent quality-of-life improvements in a state of semi-official optionality.
That matters for perception. A new Windows user who does not know PowerToys exists will conclude that Windows lacks these conveniences. A Mac user trying Windows again after years away may not be inclined to hunt for utilities before forming an opinion. The out-of-box experience still sets the emotional baseline.
For WindowsForum readers, the answer is obvious: install the tools and move on. But for Microsoft, the lesson should be sharper. If the same utilities appear on every “make Windows more like macOS” list year after year, they are not niche requests anymore.

The Windows 11 Mac-Envy Kit Has a Sensible Shape​

The practical setup is not complicated, and it does not require turning Windows into a macOS cosplay project. The goal is to borrow the workflows that make sense while keeping the strengths that brought users to Windows in the first place: hardware choice, gaming, enterprise manageability, broad software compatibility, and deep customization.
A restrained setup looks like this:
  • Install Microsoft PowerToys first, because it covers the most ground with the least trust penalty.
  • Enable PowerToys Run or its current command-surface successor if you want a Spotlight-like launcher that gets you out of the Start menu.
  • Enable Peek if you regularly inspect images, PDFs, documents, or code-adjacent files and want a Quick Look-style preview habit.
  • Enable PowerRename if you ever batch rename files, because File Explorer’s native rename behavior is too limited for serious cleanup work.
  • Use LocalSend when you need fast local transfers across Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS devices on the same network.
  • Add WinXCorners only if Hot Corners are genuinely part of how you want to drive the desktop, because pointer-trigger features are powerful but not universally loved.
That combination does not make Windows 11 identical to macOS, and it should not. It makes Windows less fussy in the exact places where macOS has trained users to expect speed. More importantly, it does so without giving up the openness that makes Windows useful to so many different kinds of people.
The irony is that Windows 11 is closest to macOS not when it imitates Apple’s visuals, but when it imitates Apple’s respect for repeated actions. Fast local sharing, instant launching, temporary previews, programmable corners, and safe batch renaming are not glamorous features. They are the operating-system equivalent of sharp knives in a kitchen: invisible when they work, infuriating when they are dull.
Microsoft does not need to turn Windows into macOS to close this gap. It needs to promote the best of its own power-user ecosystem from optional utility to first-class experience, while leaving room for community tools where cross-platform reality moves faster than platform politics. Until then, the best Windows 11 setup will remain partly built by Microsoft, partly built by open-source developers, and partly built by users who know that the fastest operating system is often the one that simply gets out of the way.

References​

  1. Primary source: aol.com
    Published: 2026-06-09T03:10:10.518983
  2. Official source: support.microsoft.com
  3. Official source: learn.microsoft.com
  4. Related coverage: techradar.com
 

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