That's probably just yet another bug in Windows 10. It *would* appear in the All Apps list within the Start menu, though. This will work for new or existing users.īecause the Start menu would already be created and because you can't customize another user's Start menu, the app would not appear on the Start menu. If you wanted it installed for all users, you would have to set the script to run upon login for all users. If you wanted it installed for a single user, you could have the script run upon login of the user. This is not provisioning it's simply installing an app for the current user. A script can be used to install an app for the *current* user. So basically, you would just be adding your own to the list.Īssuming that the default Start menu includes a reference to the app, the new user's Start menu would display the app.Ģ. Provisioned apps include the ones that come with Windows 10, like Mail and Groove. Provisioning does *not* affect existing users in any way. When you provision app, you're saying, 'install this app automatically during the setup process of this user's profile.' For users who have not already logged in, you can *provision* an app. To my knowledge, you can't do what you're asking because the Start menu doesn't work that way.ġ.