↑ ↑ ↑ ✔
IMO you'd be better off migrating to Win 10 as your primary OS, and only keep a Win 7 partition for essential applications that will not run on Win 10, and for which there is no alternative… which would be rare.
Providing you're willing to accept what are secondary differences such as the partial replacement of the Control panel with Settings, and a different looking Start menu, it is not hard to make Win10 look and feel like Win 7 without resorting to add-ons.
And some of the utility tools in Win 10 are way better the Win 7 offerings - the file manager, screen grab, and clipboard history are three that spring to mind.
BR
|