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I'm an OSX user and don't like that the scrolling feature moves the entire window on Windows 10. This creates a jarring effect on the entire screen, when I'm dealing with only a particular document.

Outlook, with a preview pane, in full screen is an excellent example.

IMHO, When I scroll down (or up) excessively, I don't expect the entire app to respond with a shake. Rather, the document (email for example) should respond, or nothing at all.

How do I disable the "window shake" when I scroll up / down past the beginning or ending?

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  • It is just the active window that shakes? I am using Windows 10 on a touch-screen laptop, but this sounds like a Surface-only "feature" so I cannot reproduce. Have you tried disabling some of the Visual Effects in System Properties -> Advanced -> Performance? Turning off the animation options might do the trick.
    – PFitz
    Commented Jul 19, 2016 at 14:27
  • Other names of this are: elastic scroll, scroll above the edge, scroll top bounce. No luck finding a solution, though. Some people want to fix this specifically for Excel, had no luck finding a fix either.
    – halt9k
    Commented Jan 8 at 8:45

1 Answer 1

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Open regedit.exe using Win + R or type in Registry Editor and locate HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Wisp\Touch. Then right-click the key for Bouncing and click Modify.... Then change the value from 1 (enabled) to 0 (disabled) and press OK. After that, restart and the changes should be applied.


Reference: http://errorfixer.co/disable-overscroll-animation-windows-10/

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