You may have noticed that there are times when certain buttons,
checkboxes or windows in a software or Microsoft Windows operating
system itself gets disabled or grayed out and clicking on them will have
no effect. This limitation is there on purpose and for reasons like
restricting the functionality until the software is activated or as a
safety measure that requires to complete a step before allowing you to
proceed to the next. It could also be a restriction set by the
administrator to prevent other people from tampering the system and
changing the configurations.
Logically most of the time the
buttons are disabled for a good reason but there are times when you
really need them enabled. For example, unlike fully functional trial
software, some software demo has their main functionality crippled and
you don’t get to test them out until you pay for a valid license to
activate the software. Or perhaps the LiveUpdate button on Symantec
Endpoint Protection client has been disabled and you urgently need to
pull the latest signature from the server to detect the latest threats.
If you have a similar situation where you need to forcefully enable a
disabled button, you can try any of the 6 tools listed below which we
have successfully tested on Windows 7.
1. Winabler
Winabler
is a brilliant piece of tool that can enable the disabled objects such
as buttons, checkboxes and even menus on a graphical user interface
(GUI). Attempting to enable the grayed out buttons is easy as you only
need to drag and drop the cross hair to the button that you want to
enable. If you find an object that automatically disables after enabling
it, you can tick on the checkbox “Repeatedly enable objects that
continually disable themselves” below the crosshair. Another unique
feature found in Winabler is the “menu capture and enabling”. Basically
this function will capture all the menus on a window that Winabler can
detect and then offers you to click on any of them regardless if they
are enabled or disabled. Do take note that you should be clicking on the
captured menu in Winabler instead of the source.
Download Winabler
2. TurnItOn! / Enable!
Enable!
previously known as TurnItOn! is a free and portable tool that offers
slightly more control over the rest because it shows the lists of
detected buttons and you can selectively choose to enable the disabled
buttons. First you need to click and hold the “Drag me!” text, then drag
and drop it to the disabled object. Then at the text, select the
detected object that you want to enable followed by clicking the Enable!
button. Other than just enable, you can also disable, show, activate
and hide objects.
Download TurnItOn! / Enable!
3. DM2
DM2
is actually a windows manager that allows you to manipulate opened
windows such as putting it on top, minimizing to tray and etc. It
supports custom plugins and by default it comes with one called
WinEnable that simply enables disabled buttons and windows with a
hotkey. Do note that it does not work right out of the box and requires
assigning a hotkey to enable the command. Run DM2, double click on the
DM2 tray icon at the notification area to bring up the settings and
click on Hotkey. Click the Add button, set a hotkey and select “Toggle
WinEnable module (Plugins)” from the command drop down menu. Click Save.
Whenever
you want to enable a disable button, press the hotkey that you assigned
earlier and you will notice an additional tray icon that looks like
multiple windows loaded in the notification area. Move your mouse cursor
to the grayed out button and click on it to enable it.
Download DM2
4. Windows Enabler
If
you are looking for an easy to use object enabling tool that works by
clicking a single button, Windows Enabler is one of such tool. Windows
Enabler is probably one of the first program that is able to enable
disabled buttons because it was released 10 years ago and surprisingly
it still works under Windows 7! The archive comes with 4 files and all
you need to do is run Windows Enable.exe file and double click on the
tray icon. When you see word “On” added to the tray icon, you can now
click on any disabled buttons to attempt to enable it. There is no
graphical user interface nor configuration windows.
Download Windows Enabler
5. Enabler
Enabler
is a very small (60KB in file size) and simple tool that can be used to
enable the disable Windows button with only a click of a mouse button.
All you need to do is run the program and click the Enable button. The
only drawback with such simple tool is you don’t know for sure whether
it manage to detect the disabled button in the first place.
Download Enabler
6. Daanav Enabler
Unlike
all of the tools listed above, Daanav Enabler is a more up to date tool
that is tested to work under Windows 8. To enable disabled windows, you
can either click the “Enable Disabled” button or press the F6 key when
your mouse cursor is hovered on the titlebar of the application window.
Although
Daanav Enabler is new, our only gripe on this tool is it comes with an
unnecessary installer when it is actually a very small program that is
portable.
Download Daanav Enabler
Editor’s Note:
If you are eager to test the programs above but currently can’t think
of where to find a disabled button, try running Windows Task Manager.
Simultaneously press Ctrl+Shift+Esc to launch Windows Task Manager and
click on the Users tab. Then click on your user name and you will see
the “Send Message” button grayed out / disabled. You can now enabling
the Send Message button with any of the 6 tools that we have mentioned
and it should work. Do note that not all disabled or grayed out buttons,
checkboxes, radios and etc can be enabled.
Thank you..
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