where is it?

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010 01:53 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
I don't understand why Windows has removed the menu-bar from most of its programs. Am I more daft than the average user, or do other people also have to randomly click on the various icons in the program window, as well as right-clicking everywhere in the window, while trying to find the darn File-Open or Edit-Undo** (etc) options?

So... I've double-clicked a video file, and it opens and plays in Windows Media Player. But where is the File-Open option in order to open a different video file? I don't want to open a Library or create a library, I just want to open a file in a folder on my C: drive. I can't figure out how to do it except by switching back to my Windows Explorer window and double-clicking the other video file there!

And why, in WMP's "Now Playing" view, is the little icon for "Switch to Library" in the top-right corner of the screen, but when you click that and open the Library view, the "Switch to Now Playing" icon is shown in the bottom-right corner, instead of the top-right corner which would have been consistent?

AAHHH!!! I FOUND IT!!!! In the Library view, in the lower left-hand corner where it shows the current file-name, right-click the file-name, and it then displays a context menu which contains File-Open! Naturally, the file-name is in the bottom-left of the Library view, because if they had put it in the top-left corner, it would have been consistent with the Now Playing view, and nobody wants consistency in their user inteface, right?!
When you right-click the file-name in the Now Playing view, the context menu does NOT contain File-Open. Tricky, tricky media player, haah!!! But I found it anyway, you idiotic user interface!!!

** (updated) There's a little curved arrow icon near the top left of the window; that's how you access the Undo function.
darkoshi: (Default)
If you hover the cursor over the top edge of a window so that it changes to the up-down pointer, and then double-click, it resizes the window to the maximum height while not changing the width. This can be handy.

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I dislike that when you drag a window to the top edge of the screen, it is automatically maximized ("aero snap" feature). But I like the half-width maximization that you can get by dragging a window to the side edges of the screen; this makes it easy to tile 2 windows side by side, when you need to see both at the same time. Therefore, I won't disable this feature. This page shows how one could disable it.

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Deleting the "Extended" string value under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\cmd in the registry causes an "Open Command Window Prompt Here" to display in the context menu in Explorer when clicking a folder. The Extended part makes the context menu only show up when you shift-right-click (that was working, but I don't want to have to press shift to get it).

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The default height of the Start Menu is less than the screen height; therefore you may need to use the vertical scroll bar to scroll through the All Programs list.
To make the Start Menu taller, you can do this:
- Open the Start Menu Properties window
- Select the "Store and display recently opened programs in the Start Menu" checkbox (don't worry; it can be unselected again at the end)
- Click "Customize" and set "Number of recent programs to display" to a large number such as 30.
- Click OK and again OK.
- The Start Menu will be taller.
- Now you can go back and unselect the "Store and display recently opened programs in the Start Menu" checkbox. That will cause the Customize window to display zero in the "Number of recent programs to display" field, but the Start Menu will remain the taller size.

(This is also mentioned here).

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To disable animations...
System Properties - Advanced (tab) - Performance (section) .. Settings (button) ... Visual Effects (tab)
- Select the "Custom" radio button and then unselect any of the following:
"Animate windows when minimizing and maximizing" and
"Animations in the taskbar and Start Menu".
"Fade or slide menus into view"

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The following registry change can be done to prevent (delay) the mini-windows from popping up when the mouse hovers over the taskbar.

HKEY_CURRENT_USER \ Software \ Microsoft \ Windows \ CurrentVersion \ Explorer \ Advanced
- Create a new DWORD (32-bit) value named ExtendedUIHoverTime
- Double-click ExtendedUIHoverTime and click Decimal
- To increase the hover delay to 5 seconds, type 5000. Type 10000 for 10 seconds and so forth…
- The change may not take effect until after rebooting.

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To get the QuickLaunch toolbar to work like it did in XP...

For all the icons on the taskbar, right-click and select "Unpin...." to remove them, and do the following to instead create Quicklaunch icons.

1. Right click on a empty space on the taskbar and click on New Tool.
2. In the Folder line, type or copy:
%userprofile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch
3. Click on the Select Folder button.
4. You now have a Quick Launch toolbar on the taskbar.
NOTE: Click on the arrow to see your Quick Launch shortcuts.

6. To Remove Quick Launch Toolbar Icon Text or Title -
A) Unlock the taskbar.
B) Right click on the Quick Launch toolbar title name, then uncheck the Show Text and Show Title by clicking on them. (See screenshot below step 5B)
C) Lock the taskbar.

8. To Have Quick Launch Toolbar on Left Side of Taskbar -
A) Unlock the taskbar.
B) Left click on the dotted lines of the pinned taskbar programs of the left side and hold, then drag it to the right past the Quick Launch toolbar and release.
C) The Quick Launch toolbar is now on the left side of the taskbar.
D) Left click on the dotted lines of these and hold and drag them to make any adjustments to how you want them place on the taskbar.
E) Lock the taskbar.

Then save your desktop theme - the page says you need to do that.

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I like that with Window 7, you can use drag and drop to rearrange the open programs/buttons on the taskbar. But you can't separate different instances of the same program - they are all grouped next to each other, even if they were started at different times, after other programs were started. You can only drag and drop the whole group.

http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows7/Change-how-buttons-appear-on-the-taskbar
"You might notice that multiple buttons representing the same program remain grouped together on the taskbar, whether you've chosen to display the expanded button labels or not. In previous versions of Windows, windows appeared on the taskbar in the order you opened them, but in Windows 7, related windows always appear next to each other. "

It makes sense that some people would like that functionality, but I prefer to have them shown in the order I opened them, not always next to each other, and to be able to drag and drop individual instances of a program.

There's a program "Taskbar Tweaker" at the bottom of this page that lets you do this. In the program, select the "Don't group" option. The settings also include an option for running the program at startup.

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KatMouse is a nice little utility which lets your mouse scroll the window which is under it, even when that window does not have the focus. This is especially useful for Windows Explorer, as you can click in the left pane to open a folder, and then scroll the right pane without first having to click there to give it focus.

WizMouse is another utility similar to KatMouse. It apparently includes functionality for horizontal scrolling (of non-focus windows?), but that part does not work for me. It also does not work for scrolling non-focus windows when the Task Manager has focus; therefore I prefer KatMouse.

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I've been having a problem with "TrustedInstaller.exe" ("Windows Modules Installer") causing continuous hard drive activity, for up to an hour or more (until I terminate the process).
My Windows Updates configuration is set to check for updates but ask me before downloading or installing them. There were no updates in progress at the time of the excess hard drive activity.
I also have Indexing ("Windows Search") and Superfetch disabled.
I haven't been able to figure out what is causing the problem.
For the time being, I've disabled the Windows Modules Installer service, but I need to remember to turn it back on. Otherwise I may not get any more updates.

Update: Today I restarted the Windows Modules Installer service, and TrustedInstaller started back up with a lot of disk activity, mainly in the c:\windows\system32\config\COMPONENTS** files, and also the c:\windows\winsxs\ files.

Based on this page, the COMPONENTS files correspond to the HKLM\COMPONENTS hive of the registry. So for some reason TrustedInstaller appeared to be continuously updating that part of the registry. After about an hour, the hard drive activity stopped, and the TrustedInstaller process was no longer running. TrustedInstaller has not restarted again in the last hour, so hopefully it is finished doing whatever it was doing, and won't start again.
darkoshi: (Default)
I just tried doing something on Win7, and it has the same infuriating inexplicable behavior as Vista.

I had downloaded a zip file to a shared (read-only) folder on my XP machine. I connected the Win7 machine to the shared folder, and tried to unzip the file to a local folder. I got the message "Access to the compressed (zipped) folder is denied. Before you can extract files, you must change the permissions for this compressed (zipped) folder." When I open the Properties window for the file, the Security tab says "You do not have permission to view or edit this object's permission settings."

I am able to unzip the file fine on the XP machine, but not from the Win7 machine.

So then, on the Win7 machine, I tried copying the file from the shared folder to a local folder. I am able to copy other files from that folder, but not this one. This one gives an error: "You do not have permission to perform this action. You require permission from the computer's administrator to make changes to this folder". If I try copying it from a command prompt, I get "Access is denied". The computer only has one user set up on it, and the user has administrator privileges.

I am able to download the same zip file from the internet to the Win7 machine, and am able to unzip that version fine. So it seems that any file I downloaded to the XP machine (I'm assuming that is what is "special" about the files that give me errors), I am not able to copy directly over to a Vista or Win7 machine.
HOWEVER, if on the XP machine, I move or copy the downloaded zip file to another folder (such as a subfolder of the shared folder), then on the Win7 machine I can view the file's Property - Settings tab, and I **AM** able to copy it directly from that XP folder to the Win7 machine without even having changed any permission settings.

So basically, if I want to copy all my files from my XP machine to a Vista or Win7 machine, I'll have to first copy them to some intermediate location.

Tests of different file types:
Downloaded a different zip file to XP machine; am NOT able to copy it directly from Win7 machine.
Downloaded a jpg file to XP machine; was able to copy it directly from Win7 machine.
Saved internet HTML files (with and without Java) to XP machine (File - Save); was able to copy them directly from Win7 machine.
Downloaded HTML pages (with and without Java) to XP machine (right-click link, Save Link As...); am NOT able to copy them directly to Win7 machine.
Renamed downloaded HTML page on XP machine; still am NOT able to copy it directly to Win7 machine.
Downloaded a .doc file to XP machine; was able to copy it directly from Win7 machine.
Downloaded a .rtf file to XP machine; was able to copy it directly from Win7 machine.
(But on the Vista machine, there had been an RTF file I WASN'T able to copy... there is one RTF file on the XP machine which I'm not able to copy over, but I am able to copy over other downloaded RTF files... so maybe there are other things that factor into the problem, not just that a file has been downloaded.)

Created a shared read-write folder on the Win7 machine and tried connecting to it from the XP machine.... wasn't able to. Even though I turned on Public Folder sharing on the Win7 machine, and gave Everyone read-write access to the shared folder, it still doesn't let me connect to the shared folder from the XP machine without a userid/password. Setting up userids and passwords might work, but it would defeat the purpose of what I was going to test.

Vista fail

Friday, November 27th, 2009 04:01 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
I wanted to copy over my files from my old desktop computer to my (relatively) new laptop, so that I can start using the laptop as my main computer. The desktop is running XP; the laptop Vista. I shared a folder that I wanted to copy on the XP machine. I connected to that folder from the laptop. I started copying files.... most files copied fine, but a few of them caused an odd popup error "Destination Folder Access Denied". I can't tell what is different about those files. It's not their extension; other files with the same extension copied ok. Tried copying them from a command prompt; still got an Access Denied error. Tried copying them to a different shared folder on the desktop - then I am able to copy them to the laptop without getting the error. Makes no sense. Did a web-search, and found that other people have had the same problem, but there's no clear or simple explanation or solution.

So. I've decided to do the free upgrade to Win 7 on the laptop, before trying to copy any more files. Sayonara, Vista. Hopefully Windows 7 is better.

(no subject)

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008 09:47 pm
darkoshi: (Default)
Windows sucks. Whenever I right-click on a very large file, I get an hourglass for several minutes. All I want to do is copy the file; all it needs to know in order to build the pop-up menu is the extension, so why does it act like it is trying to read the whole file before it will even display the menu? And this time the file is on a flash-drive, and instead of popping up the menu, it finally says "Insert last disk" and then Windows Explorer crashes.

Whereas I can instead just open a command prompt and copy the dang file in a matter of seconds. Windows better never get rid of the command prompt, I tell ya.

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