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Home Software 10 hidden features in popular software you didn’t know about

10 hidden features in popular software you didn’t know about

by Willie Campbell
10 hidden features in popular software you didn’t know about
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Software hides little time-saving treasures behind menus most people never open. This collection of practical tricks — from Google Docs to Photoshop to Zoom — highlights features I regularly use but few colleagues know about. Read through and pick two to try today; you’ll notice the difference right away.

Windows PowerToys: FancyZones for instant window layouts

PowerToys includes FancyZones, a window manager that lets you snap apps into custom grid layouts far more flexible than the default snap assist. Once you design a layout, Windows will place any program where you want it with a quick drag or a keyboard shortcut.

I began using FancyZones when working with three documents and two reference windows; it cut the time I spend resizing and switching by half. If you juggle spreadsheets, browsers, and notes, set up a few named layouts and toggle between them depending on the task.

Gmail: search chips and advanced operators

Gmail’s search bar hides a powerful mini-language. Type operators like from:, has:attachment, or newer search chips to filter by date, file type, or size without opening advanced search dialogs.

I used a complex operator recently to surface an email with a PDF sent last March from a client, saving a long scroll through my archive. Once you learn a handful of operators, finding old messages becomes fast and predictable.

Google Docs: voice typing plus voice commands

Google Docs’ voice typing isn’t just dictation; it recognizes commands like “comma,” “new line,” or “select paragraph.” It can also apply formatting on the fly, making it surprisingly efficient for drafting when your hands need a break.

When I hit writer’s block, dictating an initial draft quickly captures the flow of ideas and avoids the trap of perfecting every sentence on the first pass. Turn on Tools → Voice typing and speak naturally, pausing to use simple commands.

Microsoft Word: Read Aloud and focus editing

Word’s Read Aloud narrates your document with selectable voices and speed controls, which is great for catching awkward phrasing or typos. Pair it with Focus mode to remove ribbon clutter and see only the page you’re editing.

I proofread an entire report in one pass by listening instead of reading; errors that skate by the eyes often jump out when spoken. This combination saves time and makes final revisions less tedious.

Adobe Photoshop: layer comps for version management

Layer Comps let you save multiple visibility, position, and appearance states inside one PSD file so you can switch between layout options instantly. Think of them as lightweight versions without duplicating layers or files.

For a client who wanted three different header treatments, I created Layer Comps and exported each in minutes instead of saving separate documents. If you present options frequently, Layer Comps simplify the review process.

Slack: custom Slackbot responses and shortcuts

Slack lets you create custom Slackbot auto-responses and message shortcuts that handle routine questions or generate templates with a keystroke. Admins and regular users can both use message shortcuts to automate repetitive tasks.

At my company, we set up a shortcut that posts our onboarding checklist in any channel, reducing repetitive typing and keeping new hires on the same page. Small automations like this reduce friction and keep communication smooth.

Zoom: cloud transcripts and searchable recordings

If you record to the cloud, Zoom can generate a transcript that is time-stamped and searchable. That turns long meeting recordings into skimmable text you can jump through to find exact moments or action items.

After a lengthy project kickoff, I used the transcript to extract commitments and assemble a task list without rewatching the whole meeting. Enable cloud recording in your account settings and toggle automatic transcription for future sessions.

Visual Studio Code: multi-cursor and column selection

VS Code’s multi-cursor editing and Alt+drag column selection let you edit several lines at once, which is a huge time-saver for repetitive changes. Emmet shortcuts and the Command Palette further speed common tasks once you learn them.

I once refactored dozens of similar log statements in a file in under a minute using multi-cursor editing. These small keyboard tricks compound quickly, making repetitive edits painless.

Dropbox: Smart Sync for online-only files

Dropbox Smart Sync shows all your files in the desktop folder but keeps selected files online-only until you need them, freeing hard drive space without breaking workflows. It behaves like any local file until you open it.

When my laptop’s SSD filled up, Smart Sync let me keep years of archived work visible without consuming local storage. If you work across devices, this maintains access without the space penalty.

Spotify: enhance playlists and private session mode

Spotify’s Enhance feature suggests and inserts similar tracks into a playlist to keep the flow fresh, while Private Session hides your listening from followers and algorithmic influence. Both are tucked away and often overlooked.

I used Enhance to breathe new life into an aging road-trip playlist, then switched to Private Session for a podcast binge I didn’t want affecting my Discover Weekly. These small controls make your listening experience more intentional.

Quick reference table

Software Hidden feature Why it helps
Windows PowerToys FancyZones Fast custom window layouts
Gmail Search operators Pinpoint old messages quickly
Google Docs Voice typing Hands-free drafting
Microsoft Word Read Aloud Efficient proofreading
Photoshop Layer Comps Manage design versions
Slack Custom shortcuts Automate routine messages
Zoom Cloud transcripts Search recorded meetings
VS Code Multi-cursor Edit multiple lines at once
Dropbox Smart Sync Free local storage
Spotify Enhance + Private Session Improve playlists and control privacy

Try one thing today

Pick a single feature from this list and spend ten minutes with it; the productivity gains are often immediate. Small habits — a keyboard shortcut, a saved layout, a transcription — pay big dividends over weeks and months.

Software rewards curiosity. Give one hidden tool a try, and you may find your daily workflow gets simpler, faster, and a little more enjoyable.

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