Arrange Your Taskbar & Start menu Windows 7,,The programs that you pin to your Taskbar can be moved around to any
order you want, whether they’re just shortcut icons or actually active
applications. We recommend moving frequently used programs and folders
to the front of the stack, so it’ll be easily to launch them with the
aforementioned Windows + [number] shortcut. The Taskbar, if unlocked,
can also be dragged to latch to the left, right, or even top of your
desktop. Windows 7 improves side-docked Taskbar support with better
gradient rendering and shortcut support. It really works well if you’re
using a widescreen monitor.
Just as the Taskbar icons can be rearranged at will, the icons in
the System Tray (actually called Notification Area) can be dragged and
set to any order as well. Hidden Icons can be dragged back into view,
and you can hide icons by dropping them into the Hidden Icon well –
which is easier than working through the Notification Area
Customization menu.
Bring Quick Launch Back from the Dead
The Quick Launch is superfluous with the presence of the updated
Taskbar, but you can still bring it back with the following steps:
• Right-click the Taskbar, hover over Toolbars, and select New Toolbar.
• In the Folder selection field at the bottom, enter the following string:
%userprofile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch
•
Turn off the “lock the Taskbar” setting, and right-click on the
divider. Disable “Show Text” and “Show Title” and set the view option
to “Small Icons”.
• Drag the divider to rearrange the toolbar
order to put Quick Launch where you want it, and then right-click the
Taskbar to lock it again.
Cling to Vista’s Taskbar
Let’s start with the bad news: Windows 7 eliminates the option to
use the classic grey Windows 2000-style Taskbar. You’re also committed
to the modern version of the Start Menu. But the good news is that you
can still tweak the Taskbar to make it run like it did in Windows Vista
– replacing the program icons with full names of each open app.
Right-click the Taskbar and hit properties. Check the “use small
icons” box and select “combine when Taskbar is full” from the dropdown
menu under Taskbar buttons. You still get the peekview thumbnail
feature of the Taskbar, and inactive program remain as single icons,
but opened programs will display their full names. Combine this with
the old-school Quick Launch toolbar to complete the Vista illusion.
Banish Programs to the System Tray
All active programs show up as icons on the Taskbar, whether you
want them to or not. While this is useful for web browsing or word
processing, your taskbar can get cluttered up with icons you would
normally expect to be hidden away, like for Steam or a chat client. You
can keep active instances of these programs hidden away in the System
Tray/Notification Area by right-clicking their shortcuts, navigating to
the Compatibility tab, and selecting “Windows Vista” under the
Compatibility Mode drop-down menu. This only works for programs that
would previously hide away from the Taskbar in Vista.
Accelerate your Start Menu
The Start Menu hasn’t changed much from Vista, but there are some
notable improvements. The default power button is thankfully changed to
Shut Down the system, as opposed to Hibernation, as it was in Vista.
This can be changed to do other actions from the Start Menu Properties
menu.
Additional customization brings Videos and Recorded TV as links or
menus to the right side of the Start Menu, next to your Documents,
Music, and Games. Feel free to mess around the Customization options
since you can always return to the default Start Menu settings by
clicking the “default” button at the bottom.
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