For Win sysadmins, or Windows home power-users, here's a good tool .. 

Microsoft: "Autoruns for Windows v13.3"

By Mark Russinovich
Published: April 20, 2015
https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb963902.aspx?ocid=fwlink

 Download Autoruns and Autorunsc (Free: 576 KB)
or: Run Autoruns now from Live.Sysinternals.com
 
Introduction

This free .exe utility, which has the most comprehensive knowledge of 
auto-starting locations of any startup monitor, shows you what programs are 
configured to run during system bootup or login, and when you start various 
built-in Windows applications like Internet Explorer, Explorer and media 
players. These programs and drivers include ones in your startup folder, Run, 
RunOnce, and other Registry keys. 

Autoruns reports Explorer shell extensions, toolbars, browser helper objects, 
Winlogon notifications, auto-start services, and much more. Autoruns goes way 
beyond other autostart utilities.

Autoruns "Hide Signed Microsoft Entries" option helps you to zoom in on 
third-party auto-starting images that have been added to your system and it has 
support for looking at the auto-starting images configured for other accounts 
configured on a system. Also included in the download package is a command-line 
equivalent that can output in CSV format, Autorunsc.

You'll probably be surprised at how many executables are launched upon Win 
bootup automatically!

Usage

Simply run Autoruns and it shows you the currently configured auto-start 
applications as well as the full list of Registry and file system locations 
available for auto-start configuration. Autostart locations displayed by 
Autoruns include logon entries, Explorer add-ons, Internet Explorer add-ons 
including Browser Helper Objects (BHOs), Appinit DLLs, image hijacks, boot 
execute images, Winlogon notification DLLs, Windows Services and Winsock 
Layered Service Providers, media codecs, and more. Switch tabs to view 
autostarts from different categories.

To view the properties of an executable configured to run automatically, select 
it and use the Properties menu item or toolbar button. If Process Explorer is 
running and there is an active process executing the selected executable then 
the Process Explorer menu item in the Entry menu will open the process 
properties dialog box for the process executing the selected image.

Navigate to the Registry or file system location displayed or the configuration 
of an auto-start item by selecting the item and using the Jump to Entry menu 
item or toolbar button, and navigate to the location of an autostart image.

To disable an auto-start entry uncheck its check box. To delete an auto-start 
configuration entry use the Delete menu item or toolbar button.

The Options menu includes several display filtering options, such as only 
showing non-Windows entries, as well as access to a scan options dialog from 
where you can enable signature verification and Virus Total hash and file 
submission.

Select entries in the User menu to view auto-starting images for different user 
accounts.

More information on display options and additional information is available in 
the on-line help.


Cheers,
Stephen

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