The problem with the approach you are describing is that I don't think it will result in a complete backup. You are focussing on preserving copies of renamed or deleted files but there are lots of other situations when you may need an older copy of a file. e.g. if you edit a file and in the process ...
My first thought would be to create a RAM Disk and direct all writes to that, they are very fast and will be automatically wiped at next reboot, so perfect for temporary storage. Writing to RAM avoids having a lot of read/writes to your SSD but at the cost of using some RAM. In Windows 11 you will n...
First off let me prefix this by saying the easy and robust way to work with Floating point Numbers, is just passing them to PowerShell: powershell.exe 12.9999999 + 2105001.01 But if you really want to do this in batch: @Echo off :: Floating point Numbers to add :: These must contain a decimal point ...
To use the system tray, I think you will need some kind of utility like activetray.com
You can of course drag a .cmd or .ps1 file on top of the PowerShell icon on the taskbar and PIN it.
Assuming you already have PowerShell.exe pinned, then just right click to select & run the pinned script.