Windows includes a handy set of built-in apps—Notepad, Paint, Calculator, Photos, Mail, Calendar, File Explorer, and more—that work right out of the box.
They’re simple and intuitive for beginners, yet still useful for everyday tasks. When you need more power, you can add pro tools like Microsoft Office, Photoshop, or Premiere.
In this article, we tour the default Windows apps and show how the “workspace + menus, input → result” principle applies in the real world.
Hello, this is Jay.
Last time, we explored the universal structure of applications: a main workspace plus menus, where your input produces visible results. Now let’s apply that lens to Windows’ default apps—perfect starting points for beginners and still indispensable for power users.
Notepad
Notepad is timeless: instant launch, zero distractions, plain-text notes or quick snippets of code. If you need basic formatting, WordPad used to be the next step—fonts, colors, alignment—though it’s now excluded in Windows 11.
Paint
Paint handles quick annotations and simple edits—draw lines, add shapes, fill colors, insert text, and crop screenshots. Not a Photoshop replacement, but perfect for fast, everyday tweaks.
Calculator
Beyond basic math, Calculator supports scientific functions, unit conversions (length, weight, temperature), and currency—handy for quick USD↔KRW checks while shopping.
File Explorer
Your hub for files and folders—sort by name/date/size, search, copy, move, and delete. It’s one of the first Windows tools every beginner should learn.
Media Player & Photos
Media Player handles music/videos, playlists, and subtitles. Photos lets you view, crop, rotate, and adjust images—perfect for quick fixes without pro tools.
Snipping Tool
Capture any region of your screen, then annotate immediately—ideal for saving parts of lectures, articles, or work screenshots.
Mail & Calendar
Connect multiple accounts (Gmail, Outlook, Naver) in Mail; plan and remind in Calendar. Practical daily tools for students and professionals alike.
Clock & Voice Recorder
Alarms, timers, stopwatch, and world clocks help with schedules across time zones. Voice Recorder captures lectures or interviews in one click.
PowerShell & Command Tools
Command Prompt, PowerShell, and Windows Terminal unlock automation and bulk operations—e.g., renaming hundreds of files with a few commands.
Microsoft Store, Widgets, & Teams
Download apps via the Microsoft Store; check weather and news with Widgets; jump into remote meetings with Teams (spam surprises notwithstanding 😅).
Why Built-In Apps Are “Simple on Purpose”
- Notepad: perfect for quick text—use Word/Docs for complex documents.
- Paint: fine for crops and annotations—use Photoshop for pro editing.
- Calculator: great conversions—use spreadsheets for finance/reporting.
Windows ensures everyone can work immediately, then leaves room to add specialized tools as needs grow.
The Big Picture
Windows’ built-in apps are the starting line—enough to write, calculate, draw, view media, capture screens, and manage schedules without extra installs. From there, expand to Office, Photoshop, Premiere, and beyond.
You can view the original Korean blog post at the link below