Peace, mercy and blessings of God
If you are a user of Windows 10, you may have noticed occasional feedback prompts as notifications on the device. Microsoft has added the Feedback Hub app to Windows 10 to collect information about users' experience of the system and ask them about their level of service satisfaction, in order to give a better user experience. But if you get these notifications a lot, distracting your focus when using a computer, it's very easy to disable feedback notifications, or at least restrict them so that you can control how often Windows 10 asks you for your feedback and opinions. Let me tell you how to do this below.
Here's what you need to do to control feedback notifications in Windows 10. All you need to do first is to open the Settings app through the Start menu or use the Win + I keyboard shortcut to open the Settings app immediately. Then go to the "Privacy" section of the front page and select from the "Diagnostics & feedback" side menu. If you don't see this option, you will need to scroll down in the sidebar to appear.
The "Windows should ask for my feedback" option under the "Feedback frequency" section controls the number of times Windows 10 asks for feedback. By default, it is set to "Automatically" which is why you get feedback claims at different times. But you can also set it to "Always" or "Once a day" to get a notification once a day or "Once a week" to get a notification once a week. But if you want to completely dismiss these notifications, select "Never" and Windows 10 will not prompt you to provide feedback.
You can also disable feedback claims by turning off the Feedback Hub ability to send notifications. To do this, open the Settings app from the Start menu and go to the "System" section and then select "Notifications & Actions" from the side menu. Now swipe down until you see the "Feedback Hub" app under the "Get notification from these senders" section and then set the notifications to "Off" to completely disable notifications for this app, or uncheck the "Show notification banners" and the feedback prompt will not appear as a popup notification But it will still appear in the Action Center.
Although Windows 10 won't ask you to provide feedback again, you can still provide your feedback and opinions at any time. This can be useful if you want to make Microsoft aware of a problem you're experiencing or simply add your vote to another user's feedback suggestion. All you have to do is open the Feedback Hub app from the Start menu and log in to the application with a Microsoft account and you will be able to search for problem reports and feature requests, and it can also be voted on if you have the same notes or support adding a specific feature suggested by someone else.
These suggestions help Microsoft understand how you use Windows 10 and its various features. If you don't mind receiving feedback requests, you may need to enable them and reply to your opinion Microsoft. It is worth noting that Microsoft had removed the Metro screen and the Start button in Windows 8 because, according to what it said at the time, very few users actually used the "Metro" menu according to the usage data they received. So it is a good way to inform the company of your problems or suggestions.
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