I've done everything from here -> How can I determine which process owns a hotkey in Windows? and it turns out "Explorer" is using the Ctrl+Shift+T key bind. When I've terminated the task I was actually able to reopen a closed browser tab. The thing is - I can't recall ever assigning that key bind... Is it possible to remove/revert it? I would like to reopen closed tabs in Chrome/Edge etc. instead of launching some process in Explorer with that keybind. Thank you in advance!
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Please clarify your specific problem or provide additional details to highlight exactly what you need. As it's currently written, it's hard to tell exactly what you're asking. – Community Mar 26 '23 at 08:49
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Assuming you are on windows, you can remove the keybind from explorer by following these steps:
- Use the Ctrl+Shift+T key combination to open the explorer.
- Right click on the explorer icon in the taskbar, a menu will appear.
- Right click on the program name in the menu (it will be present just above the pin/unpin button) and then left click on properties, the properties window will open.
- Go to Shortcut tab and change the "Shortcut key" parameter value to None by pressing backspace.
Vansh
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It doesn't actually open an Explorer as per your screenshot. It opens a process that can be seen in the task manager. – Daniel Angelov Mar 27 '23 at 06:42
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