Sysinternals Suite is coming to the Microsoft Store

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25 years ago, Mark Russinovich launched Sysinternals (or more precisely NTinternals at first), a set of third-party tools that have become essential for anyone who needed to dig deeper into the inner (and sometimes undocumented) workings of Windows. For a while, Microsoft was not very happy with Russinovich’s ability to draw the curtains on Windows, but they finally bought Winternals in 2006, and put it to work on Windows while still allowing Sysinternals to remain available. .

Russinovich has since grown into the business (he is now CTO for Microsoft Azure), but Sysinternals is still alive and well, and today, at a 25th anniversary celebration, he announced that the Sysinternals suite is now available in the Microsoft Store.

If you need tools like Process Explorer, DiskMon, PsExec or Hex2dec, or even shallower dive tools like Zoomit, help celebrate Sysinternals 25th anniversary and download the suite of tools.

And that’s not all, Russinovich also announced that SysMon, one of the most popular tools, is now available for Linux:

Are you a Sysinternals user? Let us know in the comments below.

Sysinternal Suite

Developer:
Microsoft Corporation

Price:
To free

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