How to enable Task Scheduler history on Windows 11

If you want to review your tasks history, you need to enable the feature manually on Task Scheduler, and here's how.

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On Windows 11 or 10, sometimes, you may need to see the history of tasks you created to confirm they’re working correctly, but only to find out that nothing has been recorded by default in the history tab. Only the “Last Run Time” information is available in the console.

If you want to log the task events on Windows 11 (or even on Windows 10 ), the Task Scheduler includes an option to enable history manually (but for all tasks).

This guide will teach you the steps to enable or disable history for tasks on Task Scheduler on Windows 11.

Enable history on Task Scheduler

Enable task scheduler history from command prompt, view task history on task scheduler.

To enable event history for Task Scheduler on Windows 11, use these steps:

Open Task Scheduler on Windows 11.

Right-click the Task Scheduler Library folder .

Select the “Enable All Tasks History” option to enable the feature.

Task Scheduler enable history

(Optional) Select the “Disable All Tasks History” option to disable the feature.

Once you complete the steps, the next time a task runs, the events will be recorded in the “History” tab.

Alternatively, you can enable the history feature of tasks from Command Prompt using the “wevtutil” tool.

To enable Task Scheduler history with command, use these steps:

Open Start .

Search for Command Prompt , right-click the top result, and select the Run as administrator option.

Type the following command to enable task history and press Enter :

Task Scheduler enable history command

Type the following command to confirm that the feature is enabled and press Enter :

(Optional) Type the following command to enable task history and press Enter :

After you complete the steps, Task Scheduler will enable history for all tasks.

When using the history feature, you cannot enable history for one task, it’ll turn on for all of them. 

To view the history of a task, use these steps:

Open Task Scheduler .

Select the task on the right side.

Click the History tab.

Task Scheduler view task history

After you complete the steps, under the “History” tab, you will find the history of every time the task was run. The details include date and time, event identification, task category, operational code, and more.

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Mauro Huculak is a Windows How-To Expert who started Pureinfotech in 2010 as an independent online publication. He has also been a Windows Central contributor for nearly a decade. Mauro has over 14 years of experience writing comprehensive guides and creating professional videos about Windows and software, including Android and Linux. Before becoming a technology writer, he was an IT administrator for seven years. In total, Mauro has over 20 years of combined experience in technology. Throughout his career, he achieved different professional certifications from Microsoft (MSCA), Cisco (CCNP), VMware (VCP), and CompTIA (A+ and Network+), and he has been recognized as a Microsoft MVP for many years. You can follow him on X (Twitter) , YouTube , LinkedIn and About.me .

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How To Enable History in Task Scheduler

History helps you keep track of all the events of a scheduled task. Here is how to quickly enable history in the Task Scheduler.

Task Scheduler is one of the most powerful applications in Windows OS. It lets you create all kinds of scheduled tasks for repeatable tasks. For example, suppose you always open a program after starting the system; you can make a scheduled task so that the program is automatically opened after the system starts. Put simply, using the Task Scheduler; you can automate from the simplest of things to the complex of tasks as long as you know what and how to do.

When a task is executed, the Task Scheduler can keep track of all events that occurred during the task’s run. This is called task history. As you can guess, the Task Scheduler history will help you better understand the task flow and troubleshoot the scheduled task if something goes wrong.

However, the Task Scheduler History is disabled by default. If you open the Task Scheduler and select a scheduled task, you can see the “History (disabled)” tab in the bottom section. When the history feature is disabled, the program will not record the scheduled task events. Though not a big deal, for the most part, it is one of those features that you wish is enabled when the time comes. So, it is better to turn it on when you have the chance.

In this quick and straightforward Windows guide, let me show you how to enable history in the Task Scheduler.

Enable History in Task Scheduler

To enable Task Scheduler history, you have to use the “Enable All Tasks History” option. It is available in the Task Scheduler itself. Here is where to find it.

  • Press the “Start key + R” shortcut.
  • Type “taskschd.msc” and click “Ok” to open Task Scheduler.
  • Select “Task Scheduler (local)” on the left sidebar.
  • Click the “Enable all tasks history” option on the right sidebar.
  • Close the Task Scheduler.
  • The Task History is now enabled.

Detailed Steps:

As the first thing, we need to open the Task Scheduler . You can do that using the “taskschd.msc” Run command or by searching for it in the Start menu. After opening the Task Scheduler, select “Task Scheduler (local)” on the left sidebar and click on the “Enable all tasks history” option on the right sidebar.

enable history in task scheduler

After that, close the Task Scheduler.

From now on, the Task Scheduler will automatically log all the task events in the History tab. You can see the history tab by selecting the task in the Task Scheduler. Of course, you can also delete task scheduler history as and when needed.

Command to enable Task Scheduler history

You can enable history in Task Scheduler using the “wevtutil” command. Here is how.

First, open the elevated Command Prompt window. Search for Command Prompt in the Start menu, right-click on the result, and select “Run as administrator.” Execute the below command in the command window.

wevtutil set-log Microsoft-Windows-TaskScheduler/Operational /enabled:true

As soon as you execute the command, the Task Scheduler history is turned on. You will not see any confirmation message, but you can rest assured that it is turned on. From this point, Task Scheduler will keep a log of all the events during the task’s run.

That is all. It is that simple to enabled history in Task Scheduler.

I hope that helps.

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Geek Rewind

How to Enable or Disable Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

This post provides a guide on how to enable or disable Task Scheduler history in Windows 11. By default, Task Scheduler only shows the “Last Run Time” for tasks. Enabling history allows for an overview of all task histories, accessible via Event Viewer. Steps for both enabling and disabling this feature are provided, including directions…

This post describes enabling or disabling Task scheduler history in Windows 11.

The Task Scheduler service allows you to perform automated tasks on your computer. You can schedule any program to run at a convenient time based on your chosen event criteria.

By default, the Task Scheduler tasks history is disabled. Task Scheduler will show the “ Last Run Time ” for tasks only.

If you want to see the history for all tasks, you can enable Task Scheduler history. When enabled, you will see the history for all tasks as well as in Event Viewer under Event Viewer (Local) > Applications and Services Logs > Microsoft > Windows > TaskScheduler > Operational .

Below is how to enable or disable Task Scheduler history in Windows 11.

How to enable task scheduler history in Windows 11

As described above, Tash Scheduler shows “ Last Run Time ” only. If you want to see the history for all tasks, you can enable Task Scheduler history, and the steps below will show you how to do that.

First, open Task Scheduler. Go to Start -> Search and type Task Scheduler . Then under Best match, select the Task Scheduler app .

task history enable

Once the Task Scheduler app opens, click the Action -> Enable All Tasks History command on the context menu.

Alternatively, click Enable All Tasks History on the right Actions panel as highlighted below.

task history enable

To disable, reverse the steps above and click Disable All Task History under the Action menu or Actions panel on the right.

task history enable

The same actions above can be done in Windows PowerShell .

Open P owerShell as administrator , then run the commands below to Enable All Tasks History.

To disable it, run the commands below:

That should do it!

This post showed you how to enable or disable task history in Task Scheduler in Windows 11.

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Windows activity history and your privacy

Activity history helps keep track of the things you do on your device, such as the apps and services you use, the files you open, and the websites you browse. Your activity history is stored locally on your device.

You can  manage activity history settings  to choose what to store.

Features that use activity history

The following Windows features use your activity history. Refer back to this page after Windows releases and updates to learn about any new services and features that use your activity history:

Timeline . See a timeline of activities and choose whether to resume those activities from your device. For example, let’s say that you are editing a Word document on your device, but you aren't able to finish before you have to stop working for the day. If you turn on the  Store my activity history on this device  setting on the Activity history settings page, you will see that Word activity in your timeline the following day—and for the next several days—and from there, you can resume working on it. 

Microsoft Edge . When you use Microsoft Edge Legacy, your browsing history will be included in your activity history. Activity history will not be saved when browsing with InPrivate windows.

Your Microsoft account settings don't allow you to send your activity history to Microsoft, but your activity history will be stored on your device to help keep track of the things you do.

Activity history for multiple accounts

For multiple accounts, activity history is collected and stored locally for each local account, Microsoft account, or work or school account that you have associated with your device in Settings > Accounts > Email & accounts . You can also see these accounts in Windows 10 under Settings > Privacy > Activity history and in Windows 11 under Settings > Privacy & security > Activity history , where you can filter out activities from specific accounts from showing in your timeline. Hiding an account does not delete the data on the device.

Manage activity history settings

Activity history is customizable—at any time, you can choose to stop saving activity history.

Stop saving activity history locally on your device

Select Start , then select Settings > Privacy & security > Activity history .

Switch the  Store my activity history on this device  setting to Off .

Open Activity history settings

Note:  The option to send activity history to Microsoft has been deprecated from Windows 11 23H2 and 22H2, January 23, 2024-KB5034204 update. Previous Windows 11 versions before this update would still have the option available on their activity history page, and if enabled, activity history data will still be sent to Microsoft. You can either turn this option off or update to the latest Windows version to get the most recent updates.

You can clear and delete the activity history stored on your device. 

Clear your activity history

Select Start , then select Settings > Privacy & security  > Activity history .

Next to  Clear activity history for this account , select Clear history .

Note:  If you have previous activity history stored in the cloud before Windows 11 23H2 and 22H2, January 23, 2024-KB5034204 update, you can use the Clear activity history button to delete previously stored data in the cloud. Otherwise, your activity history will be automatically deleted within 30 days from when your data was last synced to the cloud.

Select Start , then select Settings > Privacy > Activity history .

Clear the Store my activity history on this device checkbox.

If you turn this setting off, you won’t be able to use any of the on-device features that rely on activity history, such as your timeline. You will still be able to see your browsing history in Microsoft Edge.

In previous versions of Windows, this setting was called Let Windows collect my activities from this PC .

The option to send activity history to Microsoft has been deprecated from Windows 10 22H2, January 23, 2024-KB5034203 update. Previous Windows 10 versions before this update would still have the option available on their activity history page, and if enabled, activity history data will still be sent to Microsoft. You can either turn this option off or update to the latest Windows version to get the most recent updates.

Under Clear activity history , select Clear .

Note:  If you have previous activity history stored in the cloud before Windows 10 22H2, January 23, 2024-KB5034203 update, you can use the Clear activity history button to delete previously stored data in the cloud. Otherwise, your activity history will be automatically deleted within 30 days from when your data was last synced to the cloud.

In your timeline, you can clear individual activities—or all activities—from an individual day. To do so, right-click an activity and select the option you prefer.

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  • View Task Properties and History

A task's properties can be viewed to find out information such as the task's name, description, security options, triggers, actions, conditions, and settings. A task's history can also be viewed along with the properties. A task's history is tracked by events in the Microsoft-Windows-TaskScheduler event log. Events are raised when a task is started, run, when the task is finished executing, and at other times to track a task's history. Errors related to a task are also tracked in the task's history. For information about interpreting the events in task history, see Event Properties (https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=70217).

If Task Scheduler is not open, start Task Scheduler. For more information, see Start Task Scheduler .

Find and click the task folder in the console tree that contains the task you want to view.

In the console window, click the task that you want to view.

Click Properties in the Action pane. The Task Properties dialog box will appear.

In the Task Properties dialog box, the task's properties are located on the General , Triggers , Actions , Conditions , and Settings tabs. Click a tab to view the properties.

Click the History tab to view the task's history.

  • Task history can be enabled or disabled. In the Action pane, click Disable All Tasks History or Enable All Tasks History to change the Task History display.
  • Click an event in the list of events on the History tab to view the description of the event.

Open a command prompt. To open a command prompt, click Start , click All Programs , click Accessories , and then click Command Prompt .

Schtasks /Query /FO LIST /V

To view the help for this command, type:

schtasks /Query /?

Additional references

  • Change an Existing Task

General Task Properties

  • Task Conditions
  • Task Settings

Table Of Contents

  • Task Security Context
  • Start Task Scheduler
  • Schedule a Task
  • Delete a Task
  • Delete a Task Folder
  • Create a New Task Folder
  • Import a Task
  • Export a Task
  • Run a Task on Demand
  • End a Running Task
  • Enable a Task to Run
  • Disable a Task from Running
  • Manage or Create a Task on a Remote Computer
  • Display all Running Tasks
  • Configure AT Service Account Information
  • Troubleshooting Task Scheduler

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Enable Windows Task Scheduler History [2023 Updated]

Enable Windows Task Scheduler History

Table of Contents

Last updated on April 17th, 2023 at 12:58 am

If you have any tasks running through your Windows Task Scheduler , then you may notice an issue where the history of any of the tasks that have been setup, is not being shown. You will also see that the last status code is 0x0 which means that the task is actually running and completing successfully.

Task Scheduler History Disabled Option

So why is there no history?

The reason that there is no history showing is that you have to enable it for Task Scheduler. To do this, you have two options; enabling using the Windows GUI or running a command line. If you are in a corporate environment and want to enable the Task Scheduler history on multiple machines, then the command line method will be useful to you for using with Group Policy or Configuration Manager.

Set Task Scheduler History Using Windows GUI

  • Open an elevated Task Scheduler (right-click on the Task Scheduler icon and choose  Run as administrator )
  • In the  Actions pane (right pane, not the actions tab), click  Enable All Tasks History

Enable Task Scheduler History

Video Guide

Please enable JavaScript

Set Task Secheduler History Using a Command Line

  • Run the following command:

Task Scheduler Enable History using Command Line

Task Scheduler Commands

Below are some other commands you can also run in an elevated Command Prompt to check the status of your tasks.

Check current state of Task Scheduler

Keystroke-averse – abbreviated versions.

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5 thoughts on “ Enable Windows Task Scheduler History [2023 Updated] ”

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Love your resources! I appreciate your details and depth writing style and all your eye cache points was so awesome.

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This was very helpful. By default, it only seems to keep about 24 hours worth of history. Is there a way to configure the retention settings?

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If you look at the second picture above, in the center pane, ‘Task status’ section, there’s a drop-down button that by default shows as ‘Last 24 hours’. If you click it, that button has several options, the longest one being ‘Last 30 days’.

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The underappreciated feature you never knew you needed: Clipboard History in Windows 10 and Windows 11

Clipboard History: Your digital memory lane in Windows

A Windows laptop with a screenshot illustrating the Clipboard History feature in the bottom right of the screen

You're probably familiar with the Copy function (and its complementary function, Paste ) and you may have even heard of the Clipboard in Windows 11 (and Windows 10 ). Clipboard is a temporary storage area where Windows stores data (like text, images, and more) that you've cut or copied from somewhere. 

However, you might not know that Clipboard has a hidden feature called Clipboard History that you can access to see a list of your most recently copied data. 

We love a good hidden feature, that functionality on your device that may not necessarily be active at default but which elevates your experience (or even your life). This series explores our pick of them - and you can read them all here .

In this week's Hidden Features spotlight, I'll take you through how to enable and use Clipboard History, which will make your multitasking and productivity much easier. 

I know I've caught myself wanting to trace my last few steps while using my PC, and having to go through browser tabs and reopen closed windows to find what I'm looking for. Clipboard History can come in handy in moments like these, and once you understand how it works, you might find yourself asking how it's not enabled by default. 

You might work on tasks that require that you copy over multiple items, especially from a variety of sources, which this will allow you to do in chunks rather than going back and forth between sources.

Clipboard History opens up a lot of avenues in your workflow - or even just for your personal projects and hobbies.

Speaking of copying and pasting, check out our recommendations for the best mice , the best wireless mice , and the best gaming mice pages for our top picks.

How Clipboard History works

Your Clipboard History will be made up of entries that you select and either right-click or press Ctrl + C on your keyboard to tell your computer to copy something. Clipboard History will store the last 25 objects you've selected, and it'll store text, code, and images. You can then open your Clipboard History, and recopy older items to paste them as usual.

Finding one of the last things you copied can be a pain, especially if you've moved on from the source you got it from and closed a window. By simply pasting using Ctrl + V on your keyboard, you only get the very last thing you copied.

With Clipboard History, you don't have to worry as much about that, and you can navigate your most recently copied items far more easily. You can enable Clipboard History for both Windows 10 and Windows 11 , and you can pin items to be able to bring them up easily in Clipboard History and prevent them from disappearing. 

You might be concerned about your PC's memory getting littered with things you don't have use for, but you don't have to worry about this either - the oldest items disappear when fresh items are copied, and your Clipboard History will reset each time you restart your device. 

How to enable and use Clipboard History in Windows 10

To enable Clipboard History, go to 'Start,' then open 'Windows Settings' by selecting the gear icon (which is on the left side by default). Alternatively, you can press the Windows + 'I' keys simultaneously. In Windows Settings, click 'System.' In the left-hand sidebar that opens, select 'Clipboard.' Once in Clipboard Settings, find the section with the heading 'Clipboard history' and switch the nearby toggle on.

This should turn on Clipboard History and should enable you to use it while using any application on Windows 10.

To open Clipboard History, press the Windows + V keys on your keyboard. 

This should open a small window that will display your recently copied items, with the most recent at the top of the list. 

To paste any of your previously copied items, select it in Clipboard History, and paste it into the application of your choice. 

The ellipses icon to the right of each item will give you three more actions you can do in Clipboard History: 

  • Delete the item you currently have selected from Clipboard History.
  • Pin an item to your Clipboard History list, which will keep this item in Clipboard History even in the event of your PC restarting or you clearing Clipboard History entirely (using Clear All ). 
  • Clear All to empty your Clipboard History altogether. 

How to enable and use Clipboard History in Windows 11

To use Clipboard History in Windows 11, you first have to enable it. You can do this by going to the Windows Start menu and navigating to Settings (represented by a gear icon ). Then select System from the sidebar menu, and then click on Clipboard . This should open the Clipboard menu, and the first setting that's listed should be Clipboard History , which you want to switch on.

You can also turn on Clipboard History by prompting this setting by pressing the Windows + V keys. If you don't have Clipboard History turned on (which is expected by default), this will bring up Clipboard History and ask you to Turn On the feature. You'll want to click on the Turn on button.

In Clipboard settings, you can also turn on the syncing feature by switching on the Sync across your devices toggle . You'll then have two options:

  • Automatically sync text that I copy   This will enable the content that you copy to be synced by the cloud and across any devices that have access to the associated Microsoft account.
  • Never automatically sync text that I copy This will allow you to be more selective about what copied contents are uploaded to the cloud and made available across devices.

To open Clipboard History, press the Windows + V keys to bring it up. This will show the most recent text, HTML, and image items that you've copied.

Once you have the feature enabled in Windows 11, select the item you want to copy from the list (just regular left-click - this will select and copy it automatically), and paste it into an application using right-click menu Paste or Ctrl + V . 

You can also click the pin icon which allows you can keep an item saved in your Clipboard History to remain accessible even if you restart your PC or if you choose to clear your Clipboard History, wiping it entirely.

The ellipses icon to the right of each item will reveal the trash can icon which you can click to delete an entry in your Clipboard History. This will also show a clipboard icon that will allow you to Paste as text if the item you've selected is or contains text.

If you want to delete all of your most recently copied items, click Clear All toward the top of this menu.

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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science > Image and Video Processing

Title: sed: semantic-aware discriminator for image super-resolution.

Abstract: Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have been widely used to recover vivid textures in image super-resolution (SR) tasks. In particular, one discriminator is utilized to enable the SR network to learn the distribution of real-world high-quality images in an adversarial training manner. However, the distribution learning is overly coarse-grained, which is susceptible to virtual textures and causes counter-intuitive generation results. To mitigate this, we propose the simple and effective Semantic-aware Discriminator (denoted as SeD), which encourages the SR network to learn the fine-grained distributions by introducing the semantics of images as a condition. Concretely, we aim to excavate the semantics of images from a well-trained semantic extractor. Under different semantics, the discriminator is able to distinguish the real-fake images individually and adaptively, which guides the SR network to learn the more fine-grained semantic-aware textures. To obtain accurate and abundant semantics, we take full advantage of recently popular pretrained vision models (PVMs) with extensive datasets, and then incorporate its semantic features into the discriminator through a well-designed spatial cross-attention module. In this way, our proposed semantic-aware discriminator empowered the SR network to produce more photo-realistic and pleasing images. Extensive experiments on two typical tasks, i.e., SR and Real SR have demonstrated the effectiveness of our proposed methods.

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IMAGES

  1. How to Enable History in Task Scheduler

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  2. How to enable, view, and clear Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

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  3. How to View and Clear Tasks History in Task Scheduler in Windows 11 / 10

    task history enable

  4. Enable Windows Task Scheduler History [2023 Updated]

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  5. How To Enable Task History In Task Scheduler

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  6. Enable Windows Task Scheduler History [2023 Updated]

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  6. 15 Allow activities to track event, task, call, email and Set field history tracking for objects

COMMENTS

  1. Enable or Disable Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

    Task Scheduler will show you the "Last Run Time" for tasks, but tasks history is disabled by default. If needed, you can enable all tasks history to start seeing in Task Scheduler, and log in Event Viewer (eventvwr.msc) at the location below: Event Viewer (Local) > Applications and Services Logs > Microsoft > Windows > TaskScheduler > Operational

  2. How to enable Task Scheduler history on Windows 11

    Open Task Scheduler on Windows 11. Right-click the Task Scheduler Library folder. Select the "Enable All Tasks History" option to enable the feature. (Optional) Select the "Disable All Tasks History" option to disable the feature. Once you complete the steps, the next time a task runs, the events will be recorded in the "History" tab.

  3. How to enable, view, and clear Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

    To enable the task history, open the task scheduler app. Type 'Task Scheduler' in your Windows search box and open the application. In the right panel, click on the tab see a tab saying ...

  4. How To Enable History in Task Scheduler

    Type "taskschd.msc" and click "Ok" to open Task Scheduler. Select "Task Scheduler (local)" on the left sidebar. Click the "Enable all tasks history" option on the right sidebar. Close the Task Scheduler. The Task History is now enabled. As the first thing, we need to open the Task Scheduler.

  5. How To Enable History in Task Scheduler

    1. Use the Windows Task Scheduler app. Press the Windows key, type task scheduler, and click Open. Locate and right-click the Task Scheduler Library folder, then select Enable All Tasks History. Once enabled from the actions tab, the next time a task runs, it will be recorded in the History tab. 2.

  6. Enable or Disable Collect Activity History in Windows 10

    1 Do step 2 (enable) or step 3 (disable) below for what you would like to do. 2 To Enable Collect Activity History. This is the default setting. A) Click/tap on the Download button below to download the file below, and go to step 4 below. Enable_Activity_history.reg.

  7. How to enable or disable Scheduled Task in Windows 11/10

    Click on Task Scheduler (Local) available on the left panel; Click on the Action menu; Select Enable All Tasks History option. To view the task history for a particular task, right-click on that ...

  8. How to Enable, View, and Clear Task Scheduler History in ...

    How to Enable, View, and Clear Task Scheduler History in Windows 11 [Tutorial]Task Scheduler, the built-in utility from Microsoft lets you schedule any task ...

  9. How to Enable or Disable Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

    First, open Task Scheduler. Go to Start -> Search and type Task Scheduler. Then under Best match, select the Task Scheduler app. Once the Task Scheduler app opens, click the Action -> Enable All Tasks History command on the context menu. Alternatively, click Enable All Tasks History on the right Actions panel as highlighted below.

  10. How to enable, view, and clear Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

    Task Scheduler, the built-in utility from Microsoft lets you schedule any task to initiate automatically. For example, you can create a task for your monthly...

  11. Windows activity history and your privacy

    Your activity history is stored locally on your device. You can manage activity history settings to choose what to store. Features that use activity history. The following Windows features use your activity history. Refer back to this page after Windows releases and updates to learn about any new services and features that use your activity ...

  12. Enable or Disable Task Scheduler History in Windows 11

    Task Scheduler will show you the "Last Run Time" for tasks, but tasks history is disabled by default. If needed, you can enable all tasks history to start seeing in Task Scheduler, and log in Event Viewer (eventvwr.msc) at the location below: Event Viewer (Local) > Applications and Services Logs > Microsoft > Windows > TaskScheduler ...

  13. How to View and Clear Tasks History in Task Scheduler in Windows 11 / 10

    Step 2: Once the task scheduler window opens, make sure you click Task Scheduler (Local) on the left side and click Enable All Tasks History on the right side in order to enable the task's history as shown in the below image. Step 3: Now that it is enabled, you can go to Task Scheduler Library just below Task Scheduler (Local) by clicking on ...

  14. View Task Properties and History

    In the Task Properties dialog box, the task's properties are located on the General, Triggers, Actions, Conditions, and Settings tabs. Click a tab to view the properties. Click the History tab to view the task's history. Task history can be enabled or disabled. In the Action pane, click Disable All Tasks History or Enable All Tasks History to ...

  15. Enable Windows Task Scheduler History [2023 Updated]

    Set Task Scheduler History Using Windows GUI. Open an elevated Task Scheduler (right-click on the Task Scheduler icon and choose Run as administrator) In the Actions pane (right pane, not the actions tab), click Enable All Tasks History; Enable Task Scheduler History Video Guide

  16. TASK VIEW History

    3. Click on Activity History. 4. In the right pane, under Activity History, enable the two options: - Let Windows collect my activities from this PC - Let Windows sync my activities from this PC to the cloud 5. Next, under Show activities from accounts, enable the account(s) you want to view its history in the Task View timeline.

  17. How can I `Enable All Tasks History` in PowerShell?

    After doing a bunch of research, I found that the History tab is just a view of a windows event log, displayed using MMC snapin. So really, all that button is doing is disabling / enabling the windows event log for the task scheduler.

  18. Use the App history from Task Manager to view your apps' resource

    How to access the App history tab in Windows 10's Task Manager. To access the App history tab, you first need to launch the Task Manager. We found it easiest to use the keyboard shortcut "Ctrl + Shift + Esc." If you did not access this tool on Windows 10 before, it opens in the so-called compact view, providing a list of apps currently running ...

  19. How to view all the tasks that are scheduled on your Windows PC

    On the left-hand side of the Task Scheduler window, you will see the Task Scheduler Library. Click or tap the arrow to see its contents or double-click Task Scheduler Library. Click or tap a folder's name to see the tasks found inside and its subfolders. Advertisement.

  20. The underappreciated feature you never knew you needed: Clipboard

    To enable Clipboard History, go to 'Start,' then open 'Windows Settings' by selecting the gear icon (which is on the left side by default). Alternatively, you can press the Windows + 'I' keys ...

  21. SeD: Semantic-Aware Discriminator for Image Super-Resolution

    Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have been widely used to recover vivid textures in image super-resolution (SR) tasks. In particular, one discriminator is utilized to enable the SR network to learn the distribution of real-world high-quality images in an adversarial training manner. However, the distribution learning is overly coarse-grained, which is susceptible to virtual textures and ...