User Guide
© 2014 Microsoft      Page 98 
Take a screen shot 
To take a snapshot of your screen, press and hold the Windows   button on your Surface, and then press the 
volume-down button. The screen dims briefly when the screen is captured. A picture of the screen is saved in the 
Screenshots folder, which is in the Pictures folder. You can use File Explorer, Photos, or the OneDrive app to see 
your screenshots. 
You can also use the Share charm to share a screen shot with someone. For more info, see Share a link in this 
guide. 
Default apps 
The default app is the app that Windows automatically uses when you open a type of file, such as a song, or 
photo. For example, when you open a PDF file attached to an email message, you can choose which app opens 
the PDF file (assuming you have more than one PDF app installed). To set your default apps: 
1.  Open the Settings charm, and tap or click Change PC settings > Search and apps > Defaults.  
2.  You can choose a default app for the web, email, music, video, and photos. If you want to associate a file 
type or protocol with an app, choose Defaults apps by file type or Default apps by protocol.  
How to restore, refresh, or reset your Surface 
If you're having problems with your Surface, you can try to restore, refresh, or reset it. Restore is a way to undo 
recent system changes you've made. Refresh reinstalls Windows, keeping your files, settings, and apps. Reset 
reinstalls Windows but deletes your files, settings, and apps—except for the apps that came with Surface. 
For more info, see Restore, refresh, or reset Surface Pro on Surface.com. 
Surface Pro 3 BIOS/UEFI and starting from a USB device 
Surface Pro 3 uses a standard firmware interface called UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface). To find out 
how to access the Surface UEFI firmware settings and boot from a USB device, see How do I use BIOS/UEFI? on 
Surface.com. 










