Win2key Access

No registry hacking. No bloated macro software. Just a small .exe and a simple config file. Modern keyboards come with two Windows keys: one on the left (useful for shortcuts like Win + D to show desktop) and one on the right (almost completely useless by default). The right Win key does the exact same thing as the left Win key — open the Start menu.

We’ve all been there. You’re deep in a spreadsheet, a design tool, or a terminal window. Your hands are on the home row. Then you need to launch the calculator. Every. Single. Time. You reach for the mouse, click Start, scroll... or you contort your left hand to press Win + R , type calc , and hit Enter.

| Shortcut | Action | |----------|--------| | Right Win alone | Launch | | Right Win + C | Open ChatGPT in a new browser tab | | Right Win + M | Mute/unmute microphone (via a tiny script) | | Right Win + Shift + S | Open Snipping Tool | win2key

That’s the magic of . What Is Win2Key? Win2Key is a tiny, lightweight utility from the late 90s / early 2000s (originally by PC Magazine, later picked up by various developers). It does one thing and does it beautifully: It lets you remap the Windows keys on your keyboard to launch any program, open any folder, or type any text string.

It works. But it’s slow.

Why? Who needs two Start menu buttons?

It won’t change your life. But every time you tap that key and the right app appears instantly, you’ll feel a small, satisfying jolt of “ah, that’s clever.” No registry hacking

And sometimes, that’s exactly what good software should do. Let me know in the comments — or tell me: what would you map that lonely right Windows key to?

Now imagine this: You tap the — the one sitting uselessly between Alt and Ctrl that you’ve never touched in your life — and the calculator pops up instantly. Modern keyboards come with two Windows keys: one

win2key