When I install a new PC from scratch (either personal or by the company), I find myself changing a lot of settings each time, like * turn off indexing on drives * disable the search box in the task bar * unpin Edge from the task bar * never group buttons on the task bar * never group buttons on secondary task bars * show task bar buttons only on the monitor that has the corresponding window * don't show news in task bar * disable Cortana in task bar * do not restart after a blue screen * set pagefile to RAM size + 2 GB so that a full kernel dump fits in * turn off PC when pressing power button * maximum of 99% CPU on all power profiles to prevent Turbo Boost * set screen scaling to 100% * expand screen to multiple monitors instead of mirroring * use small symbols in control panels * disable animation effects * set the "no sounds" sound scheme The tool that achieves this should * work with Windows 10 * cost less than 30 € Optional / ideal * ideally support other programs such as settings from MS Office * it would be super cool if it could apply a subset of these settings temporarily, e.g. while I'm working with the system (like "admin mode") and restore the old settings when I leave. This would exclude expensive settings like turning off indexing of the hard drive. On this site I found some similar requests: * [this](https://softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/74165/which-software-can-i-use-to-transfer-windows-10-to-a-new-hard-drive) question which is about changing the hard drive and migrating everything. I clearly want to do this on a new installation. * [this](https://softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/53409/is-there-a-software-to-backup-my-windows-10-settings-and-some-important-apps-wit?rq=1) one is more looking for a backup of the whole system. I need a fresh installation and then change settings. * [this](https://softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/35510/software-to-backup-restore-these-settings-in-windows) is looking for setting migration from the old PC to the new PC, but not the whole system. This is probably similar, except that I don't want to involve an old PC. Also, the kind of settings is different.