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Windows 7

THE MISSING MANUAL
The book that
should have been
in the box®ˇ

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Windows 7

David Pogue

Beijing • Cambridge • Farnham • Köln • Sebastopol • Taipei • Tokyo

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Windows 7: The Missing Manual
by David Pogue
Copyright © 2010 David Pogue. All rights reserved.
Printed in the United States of America.
Published by O’Reilly Media, Inc., 1005 Gravenstein Highway North,
Sebastopol, CA 95472.
O’Reilly Media books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales
promotional use. Online editions are also available for most titles: safari.oreilly.
com. For more information, contact our corporate/institutional sales department:
800-998-9938 or corporate@oreilly.com.
March 2010:

First Edition.

The Missing Manual is a registered trademark of O’Reilly Media, Inc. The Missing
Manual logo, and “The book that should have been in the box” are trademarks of
O’Reilly Media, Inc. Many of the designations used by manufacturers and sellers
to distinguish their products are claimed as trademarks. Where those designations
appear in this book, and O’Reilly Media is aware of a trademark claim, the
designations are capitalized.
While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the
publisher assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages
resulting from the use of the information contained in it.

ISBN: 978-0-596-80639-2

[03/10]

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Table of Contents
The Missing Credits...................................................................................xii
Introduction.................................................................................................1
What’s New..........................................................................................................................................
About This Book..................................................................................................................................
The Very Basics....................................................................................................................................

3
7
9

Part One: The Windows 7 Desktop
Chapter 1: Getting Started, Desktop, & Start Menu...............................21
Getting Started.....................................................................................................................................
The Windows Desktop—Now with Aero!.........................................................................................
The Start Menu....................................................................................................................................
The All Programs List..........................................................................................................................
Start Menu: The Right Side................................................................................................................
StartÆShut down (Sleep, Restart, Log Off…)................................................................................
Customizing the Start Menu..............................................................................................................
Jump Lists.............................................................................................................................................
The Run Command.............................................................................................................................

21
23
26
30
33
36
41
51
55

Chapter 2: Explorer, Windows, & the Taskbar....................................... 59
Universal Window Controls...............................................................................................................
New Window Tricks in Windows 7...................................................................................................
Windows Flip (Alt+Tab)......................................................................................................................
Windows Flip 3D.................................................................................................................................
Explorer Window Controls.................................................................................................................
Optional Window Panes.....................................................................................................................
Libraries................................................................................................................................................
Tags, Metadata, and Properties.........................................................................................................
Icon and List Views..............................................................................................................................
Sorting, Grouping, and Filtering........................................................................................................
Uni-Window vs. Multi-Window.........................................................................................................
Immortalizing Your Tweaks................................................................................................................
The “Folder Options” Options...........................................................................................................
Taskbar 2.0...........................................................................................................................................
Three Ways to Get the Taskbar Out of Your Hair............................................................................
Taskbar Toolbars..................................................................................................................................

59
64
69
70
71
75
81
86
88
92
96
97
97
101
114
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Chapter 3: Searching & Organizing Your Files...................................... 121
Meet Windows Search........................................................................................................................
Search from the Start Menu..............................................................................................................
Explorer-Window Searches................................................................................................................
The Search Index.................................................................................................................................
Saved Searches....................................................................................................................................
The Folders of Windows 7.................................................................................................................
Life with Icons......................................................................................................................................
Selecting Icons.....................................................................................................................................
Copying and Moving Folders and Files............................................................................................
The Recycle Bin...................................................................................................................................
Shortcut Icons......................................................................................................................................
Compressing Files and Folders.........................................................................................................
Burning CDs and DVDs from the Desktop.......................................................................................

121
122
130
132
138
140
144
150
153
156
160
163
166

Chapter 4: Interior Decorating Windows..............................................173
Aero or Not..........................................................................................................................................
A Gallery of Themes...........................................................................................................................
Desktop Background (Wallpaper)....................................................................................................
Window Color......................................................................................................................................
Sounds..................................................................................................................................................
Screen Savers.......................................................................................................................................
Desktop Icons......................................................................................................................................
Mouse Makeover.................................................................................................................................
Preserving Your Tweaks for Posterity...............................................................................................
Monitor Settings..................................................................................................................................

173
176
179
182
184
184
187
188
190
192

Chapter 5: Getting Help..........................................................................199
Navigating the Help System............................................................................................................... 199
Remote Assistance.............................................................................................................................. 202
Getting Help from Microsoft.............................................................................................................. 209

Part Two: Windows 7 Software
Chapter 6: Programs, Documents, & Gadgets....................................... 213
Opening Programs..............................................................................................................................
Exiting Programs..................................................................................................................................
When Programs Die: The Task Manager.........................................................................................
Saving Documents..............................................................................................................................
Closing Documents.............................................................................................................................
The Open Dialog Box..........................................................................................................................
Moving Data Between Documents...................................................................................................
Speech Recognition.............................................................................................................................
Gadgets.................................................................................................................................................
Filename Extensions and File Associations......................................................................................
Installing Software...............................................................................................................................

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214
215
217
221
221
222
225
234
242
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Uninstalling Software.......................................................................................................................... 255
Program Compatibility Modes.......................................................................................................... 257
Windows XP Mode.............................................................................................................................. 260

Chapter 7: The Freebie Apps................................................................. 265
Windows Live Essentials.....................................................................................................................
Default Programs................................................................................................................................
Desktop Gadget Gallery.....................................................................................................................
Internet Explorer..................................................................................................................................
Windows Anytime Upgrade...............................................................................................................
Windows DVD Maker.........................................................................................................................
Windows Fax and Scan......................................................................................................................
Windows Media Center......................................................................................................................
Windows Media Player.......................................................................................................................
Windows Live Movie Maker..............................................................................................................
Windows Update.................................................................................................................................
XPS Viewer...........................................................................................................................................
Accessories...........................................................................................................................................
Connect to a Network Projector........................................................................................................
Games...................................................................................................................................................
Maintenance........................................................................................................................................
Startup..................................................................................................................................................
Windows Live.......................................................................................................................................

265
267
267
267
268
269
269
269
269
269
269
270
270
273
294
300
300
300

Chapter 8: The Control Panel................................................................. 311
Many Roads to Control Panel............................................................................................................
The Control Panel, Applet by Applet................................................................................................

311
315

Part Three: Windows 7 Online
Chapter 9: Hooking Up to the Internet................................................. 343
Your New Network Neighborhood...................................................................................................
Wired Connections..............................................................................................................................
WiFi Hot Spots.....................................................................................................................................
Cellular Modems.................................................................................................................................
Dial-Up Connections...........................................................................................................................
Connection Management...................................................................................................................

344
345
346
351
352
354

Chapter 10: Internet Security................................................................ 357
Microsoft Security Essentials............................................................................................................. 359
Action Center....................................................................................................................................... 361
Windows Firewall................................................................................................................................ 363
Windows Defender............................................................................................................................. 367
SmartScreen Filter............................................................................................................................... 373
Privacy and Cookies............................................................................................................................ 375
History: Erasing Your Tracks.............................................................................................................. 379

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The Pop-Up Blocker............................................................................................................................
InPrivate Browsing..............................................................................................................................
InPrivate Filtering................................................................................................................................
Internet Security Zones......................................................................................................................
Hot Spot Security.................................................................................................................................
Protect Your Home Wireless Network..............................................................................................
Parental Controls.................................................................................................................................

380
383
383
386
387
389
390

Chapter 11: Internet Explorer 8............................................................. 399
IE8: The Grand Tour............................................................................................................................
Tabbed Browsing.................................................................................................................................
Favorites (Bookmarks).......................................................................................................................
History List............................................................................................................................................
RSS: The Missing Manual...................................................................................................................
Web Slices............................................................................................................................................
Tips for Better Surfing.........................................................................................................................
The Keyboard Shortcut Master List..................................................................................................

400
405
409
412
414
417
417
425

Chapter 12: Windows Live Mail............................................................ 427
Setting Up Windows Mail...................................................................................................................
Sending Email......................................................................................................................................
Reading Email......................................................................................................................................
Junk Email............................................................................................................................................
The World of Mail Settings.................................................................................................................
Calendar...............................................................................................................................................
RSS Feeds.............................................................................................................................................
Newsgroups.........................................................................................................................................

428
431
438
447
450
453
461
462

Chapter 13: Windows Live Services...................................................... 467
Home.................................................................................................................................................... 468
Profile .................................................................................................................................................. 468
Spaces................................................................................................................................................... 469
Mail....................................................................................................................................................... 470
Photos................................................................................................................................................... 470
SkyDrive................................................................................................................................................ 472
Calendar............................................................................................................................................... 476

Part Four: Pictures, Music, & TV
Chapter 14: Windows Live Photo Gallery.............................................481
Photo Gallery: The Application.........................................................................................................
Getting Pictures into Photo Gallery..................................................................................................
The Post-Dump Slideshow.................................................................................................................
The Digital Shoebox............................................................................................................................
Tags and Ratings..................................................................................................................................
Editing Your Shots...............................................................................................................................
Finding Your Audience.......................................................................................................................
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Chapter 15: Windows Media Player......................................................521
The Lay of the Land............................................................................................................................
Importing Music Files.........................................................................................................................
Music Playback ...................................................................................................................................
Playlists.................................................................................................................................................
Burning Your Own CDs.......................................................................................................................
Sharing Music on the Network..........................................................................................................
Online Music Stores............................................................................................................................
DVD Movies..........................................................................................................................................
Pictures and Videos.............................................................................................................................

522
524
525
532
534
536
541
542
544

Chapter 16: Windows Media Center......................................................547
Your Gear List......................................................................................................................................
Setup.....................................................................................................................................................
The Main Menu...................................................................................................................................
Extras.....................................................................................................................................................
Pictures+Videos...................................................................................................................................
Music: Your PC as Jukebox.................................................................................................................
Now Playing.........................................................................................................................................
Movies...................................................................................................................................................
TV: Your PC as TiVo.............................................................................................................................
Sports....................................................................................................................................................
Tasks......................................................................................................................................................
Settings.................................................................................................................................................

548
549
552
553
554
558
562
562
563
571
572
572

Part Five: Hardware & Peripherals
Chapter 17: Print, Fax, & Scan................................................................577
Installing a Printer...............................................................................................................................
Printing.................................................................................................................................................
Controlling Printouts...........................................................................................................................
Fancy Printer Tricks.............................................................................................................................
Printer Troubleshooting......................................................................................................................
Fonts......................................................................................................................................................
Faxing....................................................................................................................................................
Scanning Documents..........................................................................................................................

577
582
586
587
593
595
595
601

Chapter 18: Hardware............................................................................ 603
External Gadgets.................................................................................................................................. 604
Device Stage......................................................................................................................................... 607
Installing Cards in Expansion Slots................................................................................................... 609
Troubleshooting Newly Installed Gear............................................................................................. 611
Driver Signing...................................................................................................................................... 613
The Device Manager........................................................................................................................... 613

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Chapter 19: Laptops, Tablets, & Touchscreens...................................... 619
Laptops.................................................................................................................................................
Tablet PCs and Touchscreen PCs.......................................................................................................
Windows Touch...................................................................................................................................
Windows Mobile.................................................................................................................................
Offline Files & Sync Center.................................................................................................................

620
623
633
635
635

Part Six: PC Health
Chapter 20: Maintenance & Speed Tweaks.......................................... 643
The Action Center................................................................................................................................
Disk Cleanup........................................................................................................................................
Disk Defragmenter..............................................................................................................................
Hard Drive Checkups..........................................................................................................................
Disk Management...............................................................................................................................
Task Scheduler.....................................................................................................................................
Three Speed Tricks..............................................................................................................................
Windows Update.................................................................................................................................

643
644
645
647
649
654
657
662

Chapter 21: The Disk Chapter................................................................ 667
Dynamic Disks..................................................................................................................................... 667
Compressing Files and Folders......................................................................................................... 675
Encrypting Files and Folders.............................................................................................................. 679
BitLocker Drive Encryption................................................................................................................ 682

Chapter 22: Backups, System Restore, & Troubleshooting................. 687
Automatic Backups............................................................................................................................. 687
System Images..................................................................................................................................... 694
System Restore.................................................................................................................................... 695
Shadow Copies (Previous Versions)................................................................................................. 700
Safe Mode and the Startup Menu..................................................................................................... 702
Troubleshooting Tools........................................................................................................................ 704
Startup Repair (Windows Recovery Environment)......................................................................... 707

Part Seven: Networking & Homegroups
Chapter 23: Accounts & Logging On...................................................... 713
Introducing User Accounts.................................................................................................................
Windows 7: The OS with Two Faces.................................................................................................
Local Accounts.....................................................................................................................................
Authenticate Yourself: User Account Control..................................................................................
Local Accounts on a Domain Computer..........................................................................................
Local Users and Groups.....................................................................................................................
Fast User Switching.............................................................................................................................
Logging On...........................................................................................................................................

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715
715
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Profiles..................................................................................................................................................
NTFS Permissions: Protecting Your Stuff..........................................................................................

738
740

Chapter 24: Setting Up a Workgroup....................................................747
Kinds of Networks...............................................................................................................................
Sharing an Internet Connection........................................................................................................
The Network and Sharing Center.....................................................................................................

748
753
755

Chapter 25: Network Domains...............................................................761
The Domain.........................................................................................................................................
Joining a Domain................................................................................................................................
Four Ways Life Is Different on a Domain.........................................................................................

762
764
766

Chapter 26: Sharing Files on the Network............................................773
Three Ways to Share Files..................................................................................................................
Homegroups........................................................................................................................................
Sharing the Public Folders.................................................................................................................
Sharing Any Folder.............................................................................................................................
Accessing Shared Folders...................................................................................................................
Mapping Shares to Drive Letters.......................................................................................................

774
775
780
783
789
793

Chapter 27: Windows by Remote Control............................................797
Remote Access Basics......................................................................................................................... 797
Dialing Direct....................................................................................................................................... 798
Virtual Private Networking................................................................................................................. 803
Remote Desktop.................................................................................................................................. 805

Part Eight: Appendixes
Appendix A: Installing & Upgrading to Windows 7............................. 817
Before You Begin.................................................................................................................................
Upgrade vs. Clean Install....................................................................................................................
Dual Booting........................................................................................................................................
Installing Windows 7...........................................................................................................................
Getting Started.....................................................................................................................................
Activation..............................................................................................................................................
Windows Easy Transfer......................................................................................................................

817
819
821
823
828
828
830

Appendix B: Fun with the Registry....................................................... 835
Meet Regedit........................................................................................................................................ 836
Regedit Examples................................................................................................................................ 839

Appendix C: Where’d It Go?.................................................................. 843
Appendix D: The Master Keyboard Shortcut List................................ 849
Index........................................................................................................ 855

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The Missing Credits
About the Author
David Pogue (author) is the weekly tech columnist for The New
York Times, Emmy-winning correspondent for CBS News Sunday
Morning, weekly CNBC contributor, and the creator of the Missing Manual series. He’s the author or coauthor of over 50 books,
including 26 in this series, six in the For Dummies line (including
Macs, Magic, Opera, and Classical Music), two novels, and The World
According to Twitter. In his other life, David is a former Broadway show conductor, a
magician, and a funny public speaker. He lives in Connecticut with his wife and three
awesome children.
Links to his columns and funny weekly videos await at www.davidpogue.com. He
welcomes feedback about his books by email at david@pogueman.com.

About the Creative Team
Julie Van Keuren (copy editor, indexer) is a freelance editor, writer, and desktop
publisher who runs her “little media empire” from her home in Billings, Montana. In
her spare time she enjoys swimming, biking, running, and (hey, why not?) triathlons.
She and her husband, M.H., have two sons, Dexter and Michael. Email: little_media@
yahoo.com.
Brian Jepson (technical editor, updater of the sections on remote desktop, domains,
Registry, and installation) is a senior editor for O’Reilly Media. He cowrote Mac
OS X for Unix Geeks and has written or edited a number of other tech books. He’s
the cofounder of Providence Geeks and serves as an all-around geek for AS220, a
nonprofit, unjuried, and uncensored arts center in Providence, Rhode Island. Email:
bjepson@oreilly.com.
Phil Simpson (design and layout) works out of his office in Southbury, Connecticut,
where he has had his graphic design business since 1982. He is experienced in many
facets of graphic design, including corporate identity/branding, publication design,
and corporate and medical communications. Email: pmsimpson@earthlink.net.

Acknowledgments
The Missing Manual series is a joint venture between the dream team introduced on
these pages and O’Reilly Media. I’m grateful to all of them, and also to a few people
who did massive favors for this book. They include Microsoft’s Greg Chiemingo,
who helped dig up answers to the tweakiest Windows 7 questions; HP and Toshiba
for loaning me multitouch PCs to test; O’Reilly’s Peter Meyers, Joe Wikert and Chris
Nelson, who accommodated my nightmarish schedule like gentlemen; and proofread-

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ers Kellee Katagi, Diana D’Abruzzo, and Jennifer Carney.
In previous editions of this book, I relied on the talents of several guest authors; some
of their prose and expertise lives on in this edition. They include author/columnist/
teacher/consultant Joli Ballew (Tablet PC and Media Center chapters); author/speaker/
Microsoft Certified Trainer C.A. Callahan (Control Panel chapter); and prolific
author/newspaper writer Preston Gralla (security, backup and maintenance chapters).
Similarly, in this edition, I was grateful for the assistance of John Pierce, who expertly
updated the previous edition’s coverage of peripherals, laptops, and printing/faxing. Adam Ornstein scoured the Web to compile every known Windows 7 keyboard
shortcut for Appendix D.
Finally, a special nod of thanks to my squadron of meticulous, expert volunteer beta
readers, who responded to my invitation via Twitter: Torsten Lyngaas, Betsy Hunter,
Ryan Yi, Pathum Karunaratne, Luka Sucic, Henry Koren, Henry Braithwaite, Jesse
McCulloch, Scott Winkler, Geroge M. Sun, Chris Smolen, Carlos Rodriguez, Bill Vetter,
and Andreas Kleutgens. They’re the superstars of crowdsourcing.
Thanks to David Rogelberg for believing in the idea, and above all, to Jennifer, Kelly,
Tia, and Jeffrey, who make these books—and everything else—possible.
—David Pogue

The Missing Manual Series
Missing Manual books are superbly written guides to computer products that don’t
come with printed manuals (which is just about all of them). Each book features a
handcrafted index; cross-references to specific page numbers (not just “See Chapter
14”); and RepKover, a detached-spine binding that lets the book lie perfectly flat
without the assistance of weights or cinder blocks. Recent and upcoming titles include:
Access 2007: The Missing Manual by Matthew MacDonald
CSS: The Missing Manual by David Sawyer McFarland
Creating Web Sites: The Missing Manual by Matthew MacDonald
Dreamweaver CS4: The Missing Manual by David Sawyer McFarland
eBay: The Missing Manual by Nancy Conner
Excel 2007: The Missing Manual by Matthew MacDonald
Facebook: The Missing Manual by E.A. Vander Veer
FileMaker Pro 10: The Missing Manual by Geoff Coffey and Susan Prosser
Flash CS4: The Missing Manual by Chris Grover
Google Apps: The Missing Manual by Nancy Conner
Google SketchUp: The Missing Manual by Chris Grover
The Internet: The Missing Manual by David Pogue and J.D. Biersdorfer

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iMovie ’09 & iDVD: The Missing Manual by David Pogue
iPhone: The Missing Manual, 3rd Edition by David Pogue
iPhoto ’09: The Missing Manual by David Pogue
iPod: The Missing Manual, 8th Edition by J.D. Biersdorfer
JavaScript: The Missing Manual by David Sawyer McFarland
Mac OS X Snow Leopard: The Missing Manual by David Pogue
Microsoft Project 2007: The Missing Manual by Bonnie Biafore
Netbooks: The Missing Manual by J.D. Biersdorfer
Office 2007: The Missing Manual by Chris Grover, Matthew MacDonald, and E.A.
Vander Veer
Office 2008 for Macintosh: The Missing Manual by Jim Elferdink
Palm Pre: The Missing Manual by Ed Baig
PCs: The Missing Manual by Andy Rathbone
Photoshop CS5: The Missing Manual by Lesa Snider
Photoshop Elements 8 for Windows: The Missing Manual by Barbara Brundage
Photoshop Elements 8 for Mac: The Missing Manual by Barbara Brundage
PowerPoint 2007: The Missing Manual by E.A. Vander Veer
Premiere Elements 8: The Missing Manual by Chris Grover
QuickBase: The Missing Manual by Nancy Conner
QuickBooks 2010: The Missing Manual by Bonnie Biafore
Quicken 2009: The Missing Manual by Bonnie Biafore
Switching to the Mac: The Missing Manual, Snow Leopard Edition by David Pogue
Wikipedia: The Missing Manual by John Broughton
Windows Vista: The Missing Manual by David Pogue
Windows Vista for Starters: The Missing Manual by David Pogue
Word 2007: The Missing Manual by Chris Grover
Living Green: The Missing Manual by Nancy Conner
Your Brain: The Missing Manual by Matthew MacDonald
Buying a Home: The Missing Manual by Nancy Conner
Your Money: The Missing Manual by J.D. Roth
Your Body: The Missing Manual by Matthew MacDonald

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Introduction

It must be a great time to work at Microsoft. For the first time in years, the people
who work on Windows can hold their heads high in public.
Windows 7 is the best-reviewed, best-loved, and, well, best version of Windows
ever. Maybe part of the positive reception is because of Win7’s contrast to Windows
Vista, which was almost universally despised. Maybe Microsoft saw that it was losing
market-share ground to Mac OS X and Linux and maybe even Google and, its back
to the wall, did some of its best work.
But whatever the reason, Windows 7 is a hit.
It’s technically an evolution of Windows Vista, so Windows 7 maintains all the stuff
that was good about Vista: stability, security, just enough animation and eye candy
to keep things interesting. “Blue screen of death” jokes have almost completely disappeared from the Internet.
Yet Windows 7 fixes what everybody hated about Vista:
•• Speed. In PC Magazine’s tests, Windows 7 was 12 to 14 percent faster than Vista.
It’s especially brisk when starting up, going to sleep, and waking from sleep. A lot
of other things have between tweaked for speed, too, like noticing USB gadgets
you’ve plugged in.
•• Hardware requirements. PCs have steadily grown faster and more powerful since
Vista’s debut in 2007, but the hardware requirements for Windows 7 are exactly the
same. Even those $300 netbooks manage to run Windows 7 without bogging down.
•• Intrusiveness. Windows Vista used to freak out, with full-screen, show-stopping
warning boxes that required your password to continue, at every potential security

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What’s New

threat. But Win7 leaves you in peace far more often. In fact, 10 categories of warnings now pile up quietly in a single, unified new control panel called the Action
Center, and don’t interrupt you at all.
up to speed

If You’re Coming from Windows XP
If you’re coming to Windows 7 from Windows Vista, you’ll
probably land with all guns blazing. Most of the layout,
techniques, and functions are very similar.

PCs are too slow to handle all this graphics processing; on
those machines, the transparency and taskbar features are
missing.)

If you’re coming straight to Windows 7 from Windows XP,
though, you might feel as though you came home from
college to find that your parents turned your old bedroom
into a home office. Where is everything? A lot went on while
you were away.

The Start menu is a better-organized, two-column affair; that
awful XP business of superimposing the All Programs menu
on top of the two other columns is long gone.

This book will treat you, the XP veteran, very well; you’ll find
frequent references to the major departures from XP. But
here’s a heads-up to some of the biggest changes:
Security. You could fill several books with information about
the security enhancements Microsoft has made to Windows.
A lot of them are so technical, they’d make your eyes glaze
over, but here’s a sampling.
User Account Control is a dialog box that pops up whenever
you try to install a program or adjust a PC-wide setting, requesting that you type your password. It means that viruses
can no longer make changes to your system without your
knowing about it. You’ll see one of these dialog boxes, and
if you aren’t the one trying to make the change, you’ll click
Cancel instead of Continue. Windows Defender protects
your PC from spyware (downloads from the Internet that,
unbeknownst to you, send information back to their creators
or hijack your Web browser).
A cosmetic overhaul. Thanks to a new design scheme called
Aero, window edges are translucent; menus and windows
fade away when closed; the taskbar shows actual thumbnail
images of the open documents, not just their names; all
the icons have been redesigned with a clean, 3-D look and
greater resolution; and so on.
(Not everyone gets to enjoy these Aero features. Some

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New programs and features. Lots of new or upgraded software programs and features debuted in Vista. For example:
Instant Search. With one keystroke (the w key), you open
the Start menu’s new Search box. It searches your entire PC
for the search phrase you type—even inside files that have
different names.
New apps. Check out the Snipping Tool (for capturing
patches of the screen as graphics, for use in illustrating
computer books) and Windows Fax and Scan, one-stop
shopping for scanning and faxing. Speech Recognition lets
you dictate email and documents, and even control Windows
itself, all by voice.
Laptop goodies. You’ll find folder synchronization with
another computer, more powerful battery-control settings,
and a central Mobility Center that governs all laptop features
in one place.
New Explorer features. Explorer windows can now have
information panels and controls on all four edges, including
the Navigation pane (left); task toolbar (top); Preview pane
(right); and Details pane (bottom). The new address bar,
which displays the path you’ve taken to burrow into the
folder you’re now inspecting, is loaded with doodads and
clickable spots that make navigation far easier.
All of this is covered in this book, of course—but may this list
prepare you for some of the post-XP shocks you’re in for.

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Microsoft added a few choice new features, not the usual list of several hundred. This
time around, the master plan wasn’t “Triple the length of the feature list,” as usual at
Microsoft. Instead, it was “Polish and fix what we’ve already got.”

What’s New

The formula worked. New color schemes make the whole thing feel lighter and less
daunting. New fonts make everything cleaner and sharper. There’s a new design
consistency, too, featuring plain-English, lowercase, one-click toolbar commands
for the things you’re most likely to want to do at the moment (“Burn,” “New folder,”
“Share,” and so on).

What’s New
That’s not to say that Microsoft didn’t add any new features at all in Win7. Here are
some of the highlights:
•• New taskbar. The taskbar, the traditional row of buttons at the bottom of the screen
(representing your open programs), has been given the most radical overhaul in
years. Now it resembles the Dock on the Mac: It holds the icons for open programs
and icons you’ve dragged there for quick access.
If you point to a program’s icon, Triscuit-sized miniatures of its windows pop up.
You can either click one, to bring that window forward, or you can just run your
cursor across them; as you do so, the corresponding full-size windows flash to the
fore. All of this means easier navigation in a screen awash with window clutter.
•• Jump lists. Another taskbar feature. When you right-click a taskbar icon, you get
a new, specialized list of shortcuts called a jump list. It maintains a list of that
program’s most recently or frequently opened documents, and offers a few other
important program-related commands too.
•• New window treatments. Now Windows does more for windows. You can drag a
window’s edge against the top or side edge of your screen to make it fill the whole
screen or half of it. You can give a window a little shake with the mouse to minimize
all other windows when you need a quick look at your desktop. The Show Desktop
button has been reborn as a sliver at the right end of the taskbar—a one-click
shortcut for hiding all windows instantly.
•• A new folder concept: Libraries. Libraries are like meta-folders: They display the
contents of up to 50 other folders, which may be scattered all over your system or
even all over your network.
Libraries make it easy to keep project files together, to back them up en masse, or
to share them with other PCs on the network.
•• Effortless networking. Windows has always been good at networking computers
together—but Microsoft has never been especially good at making that easy for
the average non-techie. That all changes with Windows 7’s HomeGroups feature.
You just enter a one-time password on each machine in your house. Once that’s
done, each computer can see the photos, music, printers, and documents on

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all the other ones. At no time do you have to mess with accounts, permissions,
or passwords. Obviously, homegroups aren’t ideal for government agencies or
NASA—but if it’s just you and a couple of family members, the convenience of
sharing your printers and music collections may well be more important than
big-deal security barriers.
•• Wild music sharing. Windows Media Player lets you listen to the music from one
PC while seated at another one—across the room, across the network, or even
across the Internet.
•• Better plug-and-play. Microsoft’s little driver slave drivers were busy during the
three-year gestation of Windows 7. Thousands more gadgets now work automatically when you plug them in, without your having to worry about drivers or
software installation. The new Device Stage window even shows a picture of the
camera/phone/printer/scanner you’ve just plugged in, describes it for you, and
offers links to its most useful functions.
•• Multitouch. Does the world really want multitouch laptops and desktop PCs that
work like an iPhone? It’s too soon to tell, but Microsoft is ready for the new wave
of multitouch screens. Windows 7 recognizes the basic two-finger “gestures”:
pinching and zooming (to shrink or enlarge a photo or a Web page), rotating (for
a photo), dragging a finger (to scroll), and so on.
Other new-and-improved items lurk around every corner; among other improvements, somebody with a degree in English has swept through every corner and
rewritten buttons, links, and dialog boxes for better clarity.
Note: Microsoft has taken a bunch of stuff away, too. Most of it is complicated clutter, introduced in Vista,
that nobody wound up using. The not-so-dearly departed features include Stacking in desktop windows, the
Quick Launch toolbar, the Sidebar, and Offline Favorites.
If you’re among the few, the proud, who actually used these features, don’t despair; this book proposes
replacements for all of them.

The Bummers
Windows 7 is pretty great, but it’s not all sunshine and bunnies. You should know up
front that you’re in for a few rude surprises:
Upgrading from Windows XP
Upgrading your current PC from Vista is easy. But upgrading from Windows XP involves a clean install—moving all your programs and files off the hard drive, installing
Windows 7, and then copying everything back on again.
Clearly, Microsoft hopes that XP holdouts won’t even bother, that they’ll just get
Windows 7 preinstalled on a new PC.
The Matrix of Windows versions lives on
You thought Windows XP was bad, with its two different versions (Home and Pro)?

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Like Windows Vista, Windows 7 comes in a raft of different versions, each with a
different set of features at a different price.

What’s New

Microsoft says each version is perfectly attuned to a different kind of customer, as
though each edition had been somehow conceived differently. In fact, though, the main
thing that distinguishes the editions is the suite of programs that comes with each one.
Each main heading in this book bears a handy cheat sheet, like this:
Home Premium • Professional • Enterprise • Ultimate

This line lets you know at a glance whether or not that feature discussion applies to you.
Meanwhile, if a description of this or that feature makes you salivate, fear not. Microsoft is delighted to let you upgrade your copy of Windows 7 to a more expensive
edition, essentially “unlocking” features for a fee. See page 268 for details.
Here, for the record, is what they are:
•• Starter. This stripped-down version of Windows 7 is what you’ll probably get
preinstalled on a netbook (that is, a lightweight, inexpensive laptop that doesn’t
have a CD/DVD drive).
The Starter edition lacks Aero (the suite of animations, window-manipulation
gestures, pop-up taskbar thumbnails, and other eye candy); Windows Media Center; DVD playback; streaming of music and video to or from other computers; the
ability to connect a second monitor; XP Mode for accommodating older programs;
and a 64-bit edition. The Starter version also doesn’t let you change your desktop
picture or your visual design scheme, or switch accounts without logging off.
Sounds like a lot of missing stuff. But the truth is, none of those things diminish
the things you’d want to do on a netbook: emailing, surfing the Web, writing,
working with photos, and so on.
Note: Perhaps surprisingly, Starter doesn’t actually save you any hard drive space. Every copy of Windows 7
is actually a complete Ultimate edition on the hard drive—but with features turned off. That’s how Microsoft
is able to pull off the instant-upgrade feature known as the Anytime Upgrade. Choose its name from the
Start menu, pay a few bucks at a Web site, and presto: Your PC has just acquired one of the fancier editions
of Windows 7.

•• Home Basic. In the Vista days, the Home Basic edition was the cheapest and most
bare-bones edition sold in the U.S. But not anymore. Oh, it’s still the cheapest and
most bare-bones—but now it’s sold only in third-world countries.
•• Home Premium. This is the one you’re most likely to get when you, a normal
person, buy a single PC. It’s the mainstream consumer edition.
•• Professional. Has all the features of Home Premium, but adds Presentation Mode
(shuts off anything that might interrupt during PowerPoint slideshows); the ability
to join a corporate network; the Encrypting File System (lets you encode certain
files or folders for security); XP Mode; and location-aware printing.

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(This was called the Business edition in the Vista days.)
Note: In the Vista days, the Home editions offered some features that the corporate editions lacked, and
vice versa. Now, each more expensive edition includes all the features of the previous one. No more must
corporate drones have to miss out on the joy of Windows Media Center.

•• Enterprise, Ultimate. Same version, just sold different ways. (Enterprise is sold
directly to corporations; Ultimate is sold in stores.) Has everything Professional
has, plus it can run in multiple languages at once, has even more fancy networking
features, can run Unix programs, and can use a feature called BitLocker to encrypt
your hard drive for total security.
Note: As an Ultimate owner, you no longer get access to a special suite of free bonus goodies exclusive to
your version, as you did in the Vista days.

•• N and K editions. These are special editions sold in Europe and Korea, respectively,
to comply with antitrust laws there. They’re identical to the Home Premium, Professional, and Ultimate editions—but they have Windows Media Player and DVD
Maker stripped out. (You can download those missing free apps at any time, so
what was the point? What a waste of everyone’s time!)
To make matters even more complicated, each version except Starter is available in
both 32-bit or 64-bit flavors (see page 263 for what this means). Good luck figuring
out why some cool Windows 7 feature isn’t on your PC.
Missing Apps
Out of fear of antitrust headaches, Microsoft has stripped Windows 7 of a bunch of
programs that usually come with mainstream operating systems. Believe it or not,
Windows 7 doesn’t come with a calendar, an address book, photo management, video
editing, instant messaging, or even email!
That’s not to say that Microsoft is leaving you without these programs entirely; they’re
available in a single, free, downloadable suite called Windows Live Essentials. One
click and you’re done—not a big deal. (The company you buy your PC from may
even preinstall them.)
But you may be confused at first, especially if you upgrade your Vista machine to
Windows 7—the installer actually deletes your copies of Windows Mail, Movie Maker,
Calendar, Contacts, and Photo Gallery! (Mercifully, it preserves your data.)
Windows still has some long-standing frustrations, too. It’s still copy-protected, it still
offers way too many ways to get to a certain feature, it still requires antivirus software.
And it’s still an enormous, seething, vast hunk of 50 million lines of computer code
that must appeal equally well to a third-grader and a NASA systems analyst; sooner
or later, everybody runs into parts of it they could do without.

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On the other hand, it’s still Windows in a good way, too. It’s still the 800-pound gorilla
of the computer world, so it’s compatible with the world’s largest catalog of programs,
games, and add-on gadgets.

What’s New

About This Book
Despite the many improvements in Windows over the years, one feature hasn’t improved a bit: Microsoft’s documentation. In fact, Windows 7 comes with no printed
user guide at all. To learn about the thousands of pieces of software that make up this
operating system, you’re expected to read the online help screens.
Unfortunately, as you’ll quickly discover, these help screens are tersely written, offer very little technical depth, and lack examples. You can’t even mark your place,
underline, or read them in the bathroom. Some of the help screens are actually on
Microsoft’s Web site; you can’t see them without an Internet connection. Too bad if
you’re on a plane somewhere with your laptop.
The purpose of this book, then, is to serve as the manual that should have accompanied Windows. In these pages, you’ll find step-by-step instructions for using almost
every Windows feature, including those you may not even have understood, let alone
mastered.

System Requirements for Your Brain
Windows 7: The Missing Manual is designed to accommodate readers at every technical level (except system administrators, who will be happier with a very different
sort of book).
The primary discussions are written for advanced-beginner or intermediate PC users.
But if you’re a first-time Windows user, special sidebar articles called “Up To Speed”
provide the introductory information you need to understand the topic at hand. If
you’re an advanced PC user, on the other hand, keep your eye out for similar shaded
boxes called “Power Users’ Clinic.” They offer more technical tips, tricks, and shortcuts
for the veteran PC fan.

About the Outline
This book is divided into seven parts, each containing several chapters:
•• Part 1, The Desktop, covers everything you see on the screen when you turn on
a Windows 7 computer: icons, windows, menus, scroll bars, the taskbar, the Recycle Bin, shortcuts, the Start menu, shortcut menus, and so on. It also covers the
system-wide, instantaneous Search feature.
•• Part 2, Windows 7 Software, is dedicated to the proposition that an operating
system is little more than a launch pad for programs. Chapter 6 describes how to
work with applications and documents in Windows—how to launch them, switch
among them, swap data between them, use them to create and open files, and so
on—and how to use the microprograms called gadgets.

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About This Book

This part also offers an item-by-item discussion of the individual software nuggets that make up this operating system. These include not just the items in your
Control Panel, but also the long list of free programs that Microsoft threw in:
Windows Media Player, WordPad, Speech Recognition, and so on.
•• Part 3, Windows Online, covers all the special Internet-related features of Windows, including setting up your Internet account, Windows Live Mail (for email),
Internet Explorer 8 (for Web browsing), and so on. The massive Chapter 10 also
covers Windows’s dozens of Internet fortification features: the firewall, anti-spyware
software, parental controls, and on and on.
•• Part 4, Pictures, Music, & TV, takes you into multimedia land. Here are chapters
that cover the Windows Live Photo Gallery picture editing and organizing program;
Media Player 12 (music playback); and Media Center (TV recording and playback).
•• Part 5, Hardware and Peripherals, describes the operating system’s relationship
with equipment you can attach to your PC—scanners, cameras, disks, printers,
and so on. Special chapters describe faxing, fonts, laptops, and tablet PC touchscreen machines.
•• Part 6, PC Health, explores Windows 7’s greatly beefed-up backup and troubleshooting tools. It also describes some advanced hard drive formatting tricks and
offers tips for making your PC run faster and better.
•• Part 7, Networking & Homegroups, is for the millions of households and offices
that contain more than one PC. If you work at home or in a small office, these
chapters show you how to build your own network; if you work in a corporation
where some highly paid professional network geek is on hand to do the troubleshooting, these chapters show you how to exploit Windows’s considerable networking prowess. File sharing, accounts and passwords, and the new HomeGroups
insta-networking feature are here, too.
At the end of the book, four appendixes provide a guide to installing or upgrading to
Windows 7, an introduction to editing the Registry, a master list of Windows keyboard
shortcuts, and the “Where’d It Go?” Dictionary, which lists every feature Microsoft
moved or deleted on the way to Windows 7.

AboutÆTheseÆArrows
Throughout this book, and throughout the Missing Manual series, you’ll find sentences like this: “Open the StartÆComputerÆLocal Disk (C:)ÆWindows folder.”
That’s shorthand for a much longer instruction that directs you to open three nested
icons in sequence, like this: “Click the Start menu to open it. Click Computer in the
Start menu. Inside the Computer window is a disk icon labeled Local Disk (C:);
double-click it to open it. Inside that window is yet another icon called Windows.
Double-click to open it, too.”

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Similarly, this kind of arrow shorthand helps to simplify the business of choosing
commands in menus. “Choose StartÆControl Panel” means to open the Start menu,
and then click the Control Panel command in it. Figure I-1 shows the story.

About This Book

Figure I-1:
In this book, arrow
notations help to
simplify folder and
menu instructions.
For example,
“Choose StartÆ​
Control PanelÆ​
AutoPlay” is a more
compact way of
saying, “Click the
Start button. When
the Start menu
opens, point to
Control Panel; without clicking, now
slide to the right
onto AutoPlay,” as
shown here.

The Very Basics
To get the most out of Windows with the least frustration, it helps to be familiar with
the following concepts and terms. If you’re new to Windows, be prepared to encounter these words and phrases over and over again—in the built-in Windows help, in
computer magazines, and in this book.

Windows Defined
Windows is an operating system, the software that controls your computer. It’s designed
to serve you in several ways:
•• It’s a launching bay. At its heart, Windows is a home base, a remote-control clicker
that lets you call up the various software programs (applications) you use to do

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work or kill time. When you get right down to it, applications are the real reason
you bought a PC.
Windows 7 is a well-stocked software pantry unto itself; for example, it comes with
such basic programs as a Web browser, a simple word processor, and a calculator.
And a suite of games, too. (Chapter 7 covers all these freebie programs.)
If you were stranded on a desert island, the built-in Windows programs could
suffice for everyday operations. But if you’re like most people, sooner or later,
you’ll buy and install more software. That’s one of the luxuries of using Windows:
You can choose from a staggering number of add-on programs. Whether you’re a
left-handed beekeeper or a German-speaking nun, some company somewhere is
selling Windows software designed just for you, its target audience.
•• It’s a file cabinet. Every application on your machine, as well as every document
you create, is represented on the screen by an icon, a little picture that symbolizes
the underlying file or container. You can organize these icons into onscreen file
folders. You can make backups (safety copies) by dragging file icons onto a flash
drive or blank CD, or send files to people by email. You can also trash icons you
no longer need by dragging them onto the Recycle Bin icon.
•• It’s your equipment headquarters. What you can actually see of Windows is only
the tip of the iceberg. An enormous chunk of Windows is behind-the-scenes
plumbing that controls the various functions of your computer—its modem,
screen, keyboard, printer, and so on.

The Right Mouse Button is King
One of the most important features of Windows isn’t on the screen—it’s in your hand.
The standard mouse or trackpad has two mouse buttons. You use the left one to click
buttons, highlight text, and drag things around on the screen.
When you click the right button, however, a shortcut menu appears onscreen, like the
one shown at left in Figure I-3. Get into the habit of right-clicking things—icons, folders, disks, text inside a paragraph, buttons on your menu bar, pictures on a Web page,
and so on. The commands that appear on the shortcut menu will make you much
more productive and lead you to discover handy functions you never knew existed.
This is a big deal: Microsoft’s research suggests that nearly 75 percent of Windows users
don’t use the right mouse button and therefore miss hundreds of timesaving shortcuts.
Part of the rationale behind Windows 7’s redesign is putting these functions out in the
open. Even so, many more shortcuts remain hidden under your right mouse button.
Tip: Microsoft doesn’t discriminate against left-handers…much. You can swap the functions of the right
and left mouse buttons easily enough.
Choose StartÆControl Panel. Click “Classic view.” Open the Mouse icon. When the Mouse Properties dialog
box opens, click the Buttons tab, and then turn on “Switch primary and secondary buttons.” Then click OK.
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Wizards = Interviews

The Very Basics

A wizard is a series of screens that walk you through the task you’re trying to complete.
Wizards make configuration and installation tasks easier by breaking them down into
smaller, more easily digested steps. Figure I-2 offers an example.
Figure I-2:
Wizards (interview
screens) are everywhere in Windows. On
each of the screens,
you’re supposed to
answer a question
about your computer
or your preferences,
and then click a Next
button. When you
click the Finish button
on the final screen,
Windows whirls into
action, automatically
completing the installation or setup.

There’s More Than One Way to Do Everything
No matter what setting you want to adjust, no matter what program you want to
open, Microsoft has provided five or six different ways to do it. For example, here are
the various ways to delete a file: Press the Delete key; choose FileÆDelete; drag the
file icon onto the Recycle Bin; or right-click the filename, and then choose Delete
from the shortcut menu.
Pessimists grumble that there are too many paths to every destination, making it
much more difficult to learn Windows. Optimists point out that this abundance of
approaches means that almost everyone will find, and settle on, a satisfying method for
each task. Whenever you find a task irksome, remember that you have other options.

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You Can Use the Keyboard for Everything
In earlier versions of Windows, underlined letters appeared in the names of menus
and dialog boxes. These underlines were clues for people who found it faster to do
something by pressing keys than by using the mouse.
The underlines are hidden in Windows 7, at least in disk and folder windows. (They
may still appear in your individual software programs.) If you miss them, you can make
them reappear by pressing the Alt key, Tab key, or an arrow key whenever the menu
bar is visible. (When you’re operating menus, you can release the Alt key immediately
after pressing it.) In this book, in help screens, and in computer magazines, you’ll
see key combinations indicated like this: Alt+S (or Alt+ whatever the letter key is).
Note: In some Windows programs, in fact, the entire menu bar is gone until you press Alt (or F10). That
includes everyday Explorer windows.

Once the underlines are visible, you can open a menu by pressing the underlined letter (F for the File menu, for example). Once the menu is open, press the underlined
letter key that corresponds to the menu command you want. Or press Esc to close the
menu without doing anything. (In Windows, the Esc key always means cancel or stop.)
If choosing a menu command opens a dialog box, you can trigger its options by pressing Alt along with the underlined letters. (Within dialog boxes, you can’t press and
release Alt; you have to hold it down while typing the underlined letter.)

The Start Menu is Fastest
The fastest way to almost anything in Windows 7 is the Search box at the bottom of
the Start menu.
For example, to open Outlook, you can open the Start menu and type outlook. To
get to the password-changing screen, you can type password. To adjust your network
settings, network. And so on. Display. Speakers. Keyboard. BitLocker. Excel. Photo Gallery. Firefox. Whatever.
Each time, Windows does an uncanny job of figuring out what you want and highlighting it in the results list in the Start menu, usually right at the top.
Here’s the thing, though: You don’t need the mouse to open the Start menu. You can
just tap the w key.
You also don’t need to type the whole thing. If you want the Sticky Notes program,
sti is usually all you have to type. In other words, without ever lifting your hands
from the keyboard, you can hit w, type sti, and hit Enter—and you’ve opened Sticky
Notes. Really, really fast.
Now, there is almost always a manual, mouse-clickable way to get at the same function in Windows—in fact, there are usually about six of them. Here, for example, is
how you might open the Device Manager, a window that lists all the components of
your PC. First, the mouse way:

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1. Open the Start menu. In the right-side column, click Control Panel.

The Very Basics

The Control Panel opens, teeming with options.
2. Click “Hardware and Sound.”
Now a second Control Panel screen appears, filled with options having to do with
external gadgets.
3. Click Device Manager.
The Device Manager dialog box opens.
OK then. Here, by contrast, is how you’d get to exactly the same place using the Start
menu method:
1. Press w to open the Start menu. Type enough of device manager to make Device
Manger appear highlighted in the results list; press Enter.
The Device Manager appears. One step instead of three.
Now, you’re forgiven for exclaiming, “What!? Get to things by typing? I thought the
whole idea behind the Windows revolution was to eliminate the DOS-age practice
of typing commands!”
Well, not exactly. Typing has always offered a faster, more efficient way to getting places
and doing things—what everyone hated was the memorizing of commands to type.
up to speed

Scrolling: The Missing Manual
These days, PC monitors are bigger than ever—but so are
the Web pages and documents they display.
Scroll bars, of course, are the strips that may appear at
the right side and/or bottom of a window. The scroll bar
signals you that the window isn’t big enough to reveal all
of its contents.
Click the arrows at each end of a scroll bar to move slowly
through the window, or drag the rectangular handle (the
thumb) to move faster. (The position of the thumb in the
scroll bar reflects your relative position in the entire window
or document.) You can quickly move to a specific part of the
window by holding the mouse button down on the scroll
bar where you want the thumb to be. The scroll bar rapidly
scrolls to the desired location and then stops.
Scrolling is such a frequently needed skill, though, that all
kinds of other scrolling gadgets have cropped up.

Your mouse probably has a little wheel on the top. You can
scroll in most programs just by turning the wheel with your
finger, even if your cursor is nowhere near the scroll bar. You
can turbo-scroll by dragging the mouse upward or downward
while keeping the wheel pressed down inside the window.
Laptops often have some kind of scrolling gizmo, too. Maybe
you have an actual roller, or maybe the trackpad offers draghere-to-scroll strips on the right side and across the bottom.
And if you have one of the new breed of touchscreen computers, of course, you can scroll just by dragging around with
a finger (or two fingers, on multitouch screens).
Of course, keyboard addicts should note that you can scroll
without using the mouse at all. Press the Page Up or Page
Down keys to scroll the window by one window-full, or use
the , or . keys keys to scroll one line at a time.

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The Very Basics

But the Start menu requires no memorization; that’s the beauty of it. You can be
vague. You can take a guess. And almost every time, the Start menu knows what you
want, and offers it in the list.
For that reason, this book almost always provides the most direct route to a certain
program or function: the one that involves the Start menu’s Search box. There’s always
a longer, slower, mousier alternative, but hey: This book is plenty fat already, and those
rainforests aren’t getting any bigger.

About Shift+Clicking
Here’s another bit of shorthand you’ll find in this book (and others): instructions to
Shift+click something. That means you should hold down the Shift key, and then click
before releasing the key. If you understand that much, the meaning of instructions
like “Ctrl+click” and “Alt+click” should be clear.

You Could Spend a Lifetime Changing Properties
You can’t write an operating system that’s all things to all people, but Microsoft has
certainly tried. You can change almost every aspect of the way Windows looks and
works. You can replace the gray backdrop of the screen (the wallpaper) with your
favorite photograph, change the typeface used for the names of your icons, or set up
a particular program to launch automatically every time you turn on the PC.
When you want to change some general behavior of your PC, like how it connects to
the Internet, how soon the screen goes black to save power, or how quickly a letter
repeats when you hold down a key, you use the Control Panel window (described
in Chapter 8).
Many other times, however, you may want to adjust the settings of only one particular
element of the machine, such as the hard drive, the Recycle Bin, or a particular application. In those cases, simply right-click the corresponding icon. In the resulting
shortcut menu, you’ll often find a command called Properties. When you click it, a
up to speed

The Service Pack Story
Microsoft dribbles out a steady stream of Windows bug fixes,
touchups, driver updates, and security patches. If you have
Windows Update turned on (page 662), then you get them
all automatically, or nearly so, as they’re released.
Microsoft also periodically gathers up all of these little
touchups into a much bigger, all-in-one, free update called
a Service Pack.
Service Packs show up maybe once a year, or even less.
Each one contains hundreds of tiny adjustments and tweaks,

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nearly all of them invisible to you. They’re under-the-hood
changes, mostly for the sake of security and compatibility.
Copying files might be a little bit faster in some situations,
a frustrating feature might be addressed, drivers might be
updated, and so on.
Should you install Windows 7 SP1 when, inevitably, it
comes along? Probably. You gain a lot of invisible security
and compatibility improvements; on balance, it’s progress.

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dialog box appears, containing settings or information about that object, as shown
in Figure I-3, right.

The Very Basics

Tip: As a shortcut to the Properties command, just highlight an icon and then press Alt+Enter.

It’s also worth getting to know how to operate tabbed dialog boxes, like the one shown
in Figure I-3. These are windows that contain so many options, Microsoft has had to
split them up into separate panels, or tabs. To reveal a new set of options, just click a
different tab (called General, Tools, Hardware, Sharing, Security, Previous Versions,
and Quota in Figure I-3). These tabs are designed to resemble the tabs at the top of
file folders.
Tip: You can switch tabs without using the mouse by pressing Ctrl+Tab (to “click” the next tab to the right)
or Ctrl+Shift+Tab (for the previous tab).

Figure I-3:
One quick way
to find out how
much space
is left on your
hard drive is to
right-click the
corresponding icon, and
then choose
the Properties
command (left).
The Properties
dialog box
appears (right),
featuring a
handy diskspace graph..

Every Piece of Hardware Requires Software
When computer geeks talk about their drivers, they’re not talking about their chauffeurs (unless they’re Bill Gates); they’re talking about the controlling software required
by every hardware component of a PC.

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The driver is the translator between your PC’s brain and the equipment attached to
it: mouse, keyboard, screen, DVD drive, scanner, digital camera, palmtop, and so on.
Without the correct driver software, the corresponding piece of equipment doesn’t
work at all.
When you buy one of these gadgets, you receive a CD containing the driver software.
If the included driver software works fine, then you’re all set. If your gadget acts up,
however, remember that equipment manufacturers regularly release improved (read:
less buggy) versions of these software chunks. (You generally find such updates on
the manufacturers’ Web sites.)
Fortunately, Windows 7 comes with drivers for over 15,000 components, saving you
the trouble of scavenging for them on a disk or on the Internet. Most popular gizmos
from brand-name companies work automatically when you plug them in—no CD
installation required (Chapter 18).

It’s Not Meant to Be Overwhelming
Windows has an absolutely staggering array of features. You can burrow six levels
down, dialog box through dialog box, and never come to the end of it. There are enough
programs, commands, and help screens to keep you studying the rest of your life.
It’s crucial to remember that Microsoft’s programmers created Windows in modules—the digital-photography team here, the networking team there—with different
audiences in mind. The idea, of course, was to make sure that no subset of potential
customers would find a feature lacking.
gem in the rough

Not Your Father’s Keyboard
Keyboards built especially for using Windows contain some
extra keys on the bottom row:
On the left, between the Ctrl and Alt keys, you may find
a key bearing the Windows logo (w). No, this isn’t just a
tiny Microsoft advertising moment; you can press this key
to open the Start menu without having to use the mouse.
(On desktop PCs, the Windows key is usually on the bottom
row; on laptops, it’s sometimes at the top of the keyboard.)
On the right, you may find a duplicate w key, as well as a key
whose icon depicts a tiny menu, complete with a microscopic
cursor pointing to a command. Press this key to simulate a
right-click at the current location of your cursor.
Even better, the w key offers a number of useful functions
when you press it in conjunction with other keys. For a complete list, see Appendix D, the Master Windows 7 Keystroke

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List. But here are a few important ones to get you started:
w opens the Start menu.
w+number key opens the corresponding icon on the
taskbar, left to right (w+1, w+2, etc.).
w+D hides or shows all your application windows (ideal for
jumping to the desktop for a bit of housekeeping).
w+E opens an Explorer window.
w+F opens the Search window.
w+L locks your screen. Everything you were working on
is hidden by the login screen; your password is required
to get past it.
w+Tab cycles through all open windows using the threedimensional Flip 3D feature.

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But if you don’t have a digital camera, a network, or whatever, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with ignoring everything you encounter on the screen that isn’t relevant
to your setup and work routine. Not even Microsoft’s CEO uses every single feature
of Windows.

The Very Basics

About MissingManuals.com
To get the most out of this book, visit www.missingmanuals.com. Click the “Missing
CD-ROM” link—and then this book’s title—to reveal a neat, organized, chapter-bychapter list of the shareware and freeware mentioned in this book.
The Web site also offers corrections and updates to the book. (To see them, click the
book’s title, and then click View/Submit Errata.) In fact, please submit such corrections and updates yourself! In an effort to keep the book as up to date and accurate as
possible, each time O’Reilly prints more copies of this book, I’ll make any confirmed
corrections you’ve suggested. I’ll also note such changes on the Web site so that you
can mark important corrections into your own copy of the book, if you like.

introduction

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Part One:
The Windows 7 Desktop
Chapter 1: Getting Started, Desktop, & Start Menu
Chapter 2: Explorer, Windows, & the Taskbar
Chapter 3: Searching & Organizing Your Files
Chapter 4: Interior Decorating Windows
Chapter 5: Getting Help

1

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chapter

1

Getting Started, Desktop,
& Start Menu

M

icrosoft wants to make one thing perfectly clear: Compared with Windows
XP, Windows 7 isn’t just a whole new ball game—it’s practically a different sport. It’s different on the surface, under the hood, and everywhere in
between. (It’s so different, in fact, that this book includes an appendix called “Where’d
It Go?” which lets you look up a familiar Windows landmark and figure out where
Microsoft stuck it in Windows 7.)
If you’re moving to Windows 7 from Vista, well, your new world won’t be quite as
much of a shock. But the landscape still has shifted quite a bit.
Either way, it’s hard to predict exactly what you’ll see at the fateful moment when
the Windows 7 screen first lights up on your monitor. You may see a big welcome
screen bearing the logo of Dell or whomever; it may be the Windows 7 Setup Wizard
(Appendix A); or it may be the login screen, where you’re asked to sign in by clicking
your name in a list. (Skip to page 737 for details on logging in.)
The best place to start, though, might be the shining majesty of the Getting Started
window shown in Figure 1-1. If it doesn’t open automatically, choose StartÆGetting
Started.

Getting Started
All Versions

Getting Started is supposed to be an antidote to the moment of dizzy disorientation
you’d otherwise feel the first time you fired up Windows 7. It’s basically a window full
of links to useful places in the Windows empire. What’s confusing is that just clicking

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Getting Started

one of these promising-looking buttons (“Back up your files”? Hey, yeah!) doesn’t
actually do anything except change the billboard in the top part of the window. You
have to double-click to open up the control panel or program you need to make changes.
Figure 1-1:
Getting Started
offers links to
various useful
corners of
the operating
system. Most
are designed
to help you set
up a new PC.
(Click once to
read a description, and then
double-click to
open the link.)

Here are a few highlights:
•• Go online to find out what’s new in Windows 7. Sure enough: Takes you to a Web
page describing the new features.
•• Use a homegroup to share with other computers in your home. One of Microsoft’s
most important promises is that it’s finally simple to set up a home network if you
have more than one PC. By all means, double-click here to get started, but have
Chapter 26 in front of you.
•• Back up your files. Fires up the Backup and Restore Center, which is described
on page 688.
•• Personalize Windows. Sure, sure, eventually you’ll be plotting rocket trajectories
and mapping the genome—but let’s not kid ourselves. The first order of business
is decorating: choosing your screen saver, replacing the desktop background (wallpaper), choosing a different cursor shape, adjusting your monitor resolution, and
so on. Double-click here to open the appropriate control panel.
•• Choose when to be notified about changes to your computer. Windows 7 has tamed
one of Vista’s most ornery features: User Account Control (otherwise known as “the
infuriating nag box that pops up every time I make a change, asking, ‘Are you sure?’
‘Are you sure?’ ”). However, UAC still gets in your face from time to time. Doubleclick here to open the User Account Control settings so you can tone it down.

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•• Add new users to your computer. If you’re the lord of the manor, the sole user
of this computer, then you can ignore this little item. But if you and other family
members, students, or workers share this computer, you’ll want to consult Chapter
23 about how to set up a separate account (name, password, and working environment) for each person.

Getting Started

•• Transfer files and settings from another computer. This program, now called
Windows Easy Transfer, is a beefed-up version of the old Files and Settings Transfer Wizard. Its purpose is to transfer files and settings from an older PC, and it’s
described on page 830.
•• Go online to get Windows Live Essentials. Weird as it may seem, Windows 7 is the
first mainstream operating system in recent memory to arrive completely stripped
down. It comes with no email program, no photo or video editing app, no chat
program, no calendar or address book. (In fact, if you upgraded from Vista, you’ll
discover that the Windows 7 installer has actually deleted the Microsoft apps you
used to have for these purposes! Big whoops!)
There’s actually a good reason (well, OK, a dumb reason) for Microsoft’s decision:
Its lawyers were attempting to protect the company from more antitrust lawsuits.
Whatever. The point is that if you want these standard, free programs, then you
have to download them yourself by clicking this link. Details are at the beginning
of Chapter 7.
Note: You may not have to do this manual downloading. Some PC companies, like Dell, preinstall these
apps when they sell you a new PC.

•• Change the size of the text on your screen. Over-40-year-olds, you know who you
are. Now, with one click, you can make all text in all programs 25 or 50 percent
larger, thanks to this handy option.
To get rid of the Getting Started window, click its Close box—or press Alt+F4, the
universal Windows keystroke for “close this window.”

The Windows Desktop—Now with Aero!
Home Premium • Professional • Enterprise • Ultimate

Once you’ve recovered from the excitement of Getting Started, you get your first
glimpse of the full Windows 7 desktop (Figure 1-2). If you’d rather not go through
life staring at the Windows logo, then by all means choose one of the much more
attractive Windows 7 desktop pictures, as described in Chapter 4.
All the usual Windows landmarks are here—the Start menu, the taskbar, and the
Recycle Bin—but they’ve been given an extreme makeover, especially if you’re used
to Windows XP.

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Windows Desktop—
Now with Aero!

What you’re seeing is the latest face of Windows, known to fans as Aero. (It supposedly
stands for Authentic, Energetic, Reflective, and Open, but you can’t help suspecting
that somebody at Microsoft retrofitted those words to fit the initials.) It debuted in
Windows Vista, and it’s been refined in Windows 7.
Figure 1-2:
There are some
gorgeous new
desktop pictures
in Windows 7—
Microsoft evidently
endured one
Teletubbies joke
too many during
the Windows XP
era—although the
factory-installed
wallpaper isn’t
among them.

Desktop

See page 179 for
details on choosing a better-looking background.

Start menu

Taskbar

Notification area
(system tray)

nostalgia corner

Restoring the Desktop Icons
The Windows 7 desktop is awfully pretty—but awfully barren. If you’re a longtime Windows veteran, you may miss
the handy desktop icons that once provided quick access
to important locations on your PC, like My Computer, My
Documents, My Network Places, and Control Panel.
You can still get to these locations (they’re listed in your Start
menu), but opening them requires two mouse clicks—an
egregious expenditure of caloric effort.
However, it’s easy enough to put these icons back on the
desktop. To do so, right-click a blank spot on the desktop;

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from the shortcut menu, choose Personalize. (This option
isn’t available in the Starter edition of Windows 7.)
Now the Personalization dialog box appears. In the Tasks
pane on the left side, click “Change desktop icons.” In the
resulting dialog box, checkboxes for common desktop icons
now await your summons: Computer, Network, Recycle
Bin, Control Panel, and User’s Files (that is, your Personal
folder—see page 33).
Turn on the ones you’d like to install to the desktop and
then click OK. Your old favorite icons are now back where
they once belonged.

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If you’re into this kind of thing, here’s the complete list of what makes Aero, Aero:
•• The edges of windows are thicker than they were in the XP days (for easier targeting with your mouse). Parts of the Start menu and window edges are transparent.
Windows and dialog boxes cast subtle shadows on the background, as though
they’re floating.

Windows Desktop—
Now with Aero!

•• A new, bigger, more modern font is used for menus and labels.
•• When you point to a window button without clicking, the button “lights up.” The
Minimize and Maximize buttons glow blue; the Close button glows red.
•• The default button in a dialog box—the one Microsoft thinks you really want,
like Save or Print—pulses gently, using fading color intensity to draw your eye.
•• Little animations liven up the works, especially when you minimize, maximize,
or close a window.
Aero isn’t just looks, either—it also includes a couple of features, like Flip 3D and live
taskbar icons. You can read about these two useful features in Chapter 2.
up to speed

The Windows Experience Index
Quick—which computer is better, an AMD Turion 64 ML-34
processor at 1.80 gigahertz but only 512 megs of RAM, or a
Core Duo 2.0 gigahertz with 1 gig of RAM but only a Radeon
Xpress 200M graphics card?
If you know the answer offhand, you shouldn’t be reading
a book about Windows; you should be writing your own
darned book.
The point is, of course, that today’s Windows is extremely
demanding. It craves horsepower, speed, and memory.
But Microsoft doesn’t really expect the average person, or
even the average IT manager, to know at a glance whether
a particular PC is up to the Windows 7 challenge.
That’s why Windows analyzes the guts of your computer and
boils the results down to a single numerical rating, on a scale
of 1 to 7.9 To find out yours, open the Start menu; start typing the word experience until you see “Check the Windows
Experience Index” in the results list. Click that link. On the
resulting screen, click “Rate this computer.” (Or if you’ve just
installed new components into your PC, thereby making the

index out of date, click Refresh Now.) After a minute or so,
you’ll see your PC’s horsepower scores.
The final score is the lowest of any of the subscores. For
example, if your memory, hard drive, and graphics all get
scores over 4, but your processor’s score is only 3.1, then
your overall score is 3.1, which makes it easy to spot the
bottleneck.
A score of 7.9 is the best; it means you’ll be able to run all of
Windows’s features well and fast. You need a score of at least
4 to play and edit high-definition video. A 3 is the minimum
for running Aero (page 23). A 1 is the worst; Windows will be
dog slow unless you turn off some of the eye-candy features,
as described on page 173.
True, finding out that the computer you bought last year for
$2,800 is now worth only a measly 2 on the performance
scale could deal your ego quite a bruise.
Fortunately, Microsoft also offers the Windows 7 Upgrade
Advisor (page 268). This free program reveals your PC’s
report card before you install Windows 7, so at least you
can avoid getting a rude surprise.

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Windows Desktop—
Now with Aero!

The Aero design may not actually be Authentic or whatever, but it does look clean and
modern. You see it, however, only if you have a fairly fast, modern PC. Basically, you
need a Windows Experience Index score of 3 or higher (page 25), meaning a good
amount of memory and a recent graphics card.
Tip: If you’re not seeing the Aero goodies, and your Experience Index score indicates that you should, let
the new Windows 7 Aero troubleshooter help you figure out why. Open the Start menu. Into the Search
box, type aero. Click “Find and fix problems with transparency and other visual effects.” Click Next to walk
through the wizard. It will check things like your video memory, your Desktop Windows Manager (DWM)
service, your screen’s color settings, your chosen visual theme, your power settings, and so on. After this
analysis, Windows tries to fix whatever was wrong.

Furthermore, the Aero features are not available in the Starter edition of Windows 7.
If you don’t have Aero, you can still enjoy most of Windows 7’s features—just without
the transparencies, animations, and other eye candy. The pictures in this book still
match the buttons and text you see on the screen, but without so much decoration
around the edges.
Nobody ever said Microsoft’s specialty was making things simple.

The Start Menu
All Versions

Windows is composed of 50 million lines of computer code, scattered across your
hard drive in thousands of files. The vast majority of them are support files, there for
behind-the-scenes use by Windows and your applications—they’re not for you. They
may as well bear a sticker reading, “No user-serviceable parts inside.”
That’s why the Start menu is so important (Figure 1-3). It lists every useful piece of
software on your computer, including commands, programs, and files. Just about
everything you do on your PC begins—or can begin—with your Start menu.
In Windows 7, as you’ve probably noticed, the word “Start” doesn’t actually appear on
the Start menu, as it did for years; now the Start menu is just a round, backlit, glass
pebble with a Windows logo behind it. But it’s still called the Start menu, and it’s still
the gateway to everything on the PC.
If you’re the type who bills by the hour, you can open the Start menu (Figure 1-3) by
clicking it with the mouse. If you feel that life’s too short, however, open it by tapping
the w key on the keyboard instead. (If your antique, kerosene-operated keyboard has
no w key, pressing Ctrl+Esc does the same thing.)
Tip: To find out what something is—something in your Start menu (right side), All Programs menu, or
indeed anywhere on your desktop—point to it with your cursor without clicking. A tinted, rectangular tooltip
bar appears, containing a text description. (If the tooltip doesn’t appear, it might be that the window you’re
pointing to isn’t the active window on your desktop. Click the window and then try again.)

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Anatomy of the Start Menu

The Start Menu

The Start menu is split down the middle into two columns:
•• Left side (white). At the top, above the thin divider line, is the pinned items list,
which is yours to modify; it lists programs, folders, documents, and anything else
you want to open quickly. This list never changes unless you change it.
(If you don’t see a divider line, then you have a brand-spankin’-fresh Windows 7
installation, and you haven’t put anything into the pinned list yet.)
Below the fine line is the standard Windows most frequently used programs list.
This list is computed automatically by Windows and may change from day to day.
Figure 1-3:
Left: The Start
menu’s top-left
section is yours
to play with. You
can “pin” whatever programs you
want here. The
lower-left section
lists programs you
use most often.
(You can delete
items here but you
can’t add things or
rearrange them.)
The right column
links to important
Windows features
and folders.
Right: The All
Programs menu
replaces the left
column of the
Start menu, listing
all your software.
You can rearrange, add to, or
delete items from
this list.

Pinned items

Important locations
and functions

Master list of programs

Most frequently used

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The Start Menu

Tip: You can, if you wish, ask Windows not to display a list of the programs you’ve used most recently.
You might want to do that if, for example, it would be best that your boss or your spouse didn’t know what
you’ve been up to.
If that’s your situation, then right-click the Start button; from the shortcut menu, choose Properties. In the
resulting dialog box, turn off “Store and display recently opened programs in the Start menu.” (While you’re
here, if you’re especially paranoid, you can also turn off “Store and display recently opened items in the Start
menu and the taskbar”—a reference to the jump lists feature described on page 51.) Click OK.
When you next inspect the Start menu, you’ll be happy to see that the lower-left quadrant, where the recently
used programs are usually listed, is creepily blank.

If you see a submenu arrow (˘) next to a program’s name in the Start menu, congrats. You’ve just found a jump list, a new Windows 7 feature that gives you quick
access to documents you’ve opened recently. See page 51 for details on creating,
deleting, and working with jump lists.
At the very bottom is the All Programs list described below, plus the all-important
Search box, which gets a whole chapter to itself (Chapter 3).
•• Right side (dark). In general, the right side of the Start menu is devoted to listing
important places on the computer: folders like Documents, Pictures, and Music;
or special windows like Network, Control Panel, and Computer.
At the bottom is the Shut Down button, which turns the PC off. The ˘ button next
to it offers several variations of “off,” like “Log off,” Lock (for when you’re about to
wander away for coffee, so that a password is required to re-enter), Restart, Sleep,
and Hibernate.
Tip: After many years, the “My” prefix finally disappeared from all the important folders of your PC in Windows Vista (My Pictures, My Music, My Documents, My Computer, and so on). Maybe Microsoft was tired
of all the lawsuits from Fisher-Price.
In Windows 7, “My” may be gone from the libraries containing those file types. But within your own Personal
folder, there they are again: My Pictures, My Music...! Page 143 explains why, but in the meantime, you’re
not stuck with “My.” You can rename these special icons just as you would any other icon (page 145). Call it
“My Computer,” call it “Your Computer,” call it “Jar Jar Binks”—makes no difference to Windows.

Keyboard Navigation
You can navigate and control the Start menu in either of two ways:
Use the arrow keys
Once the Start menu is open, you can use the arrow keys to “walk” up and down the
menu. For example, press , to enter the left-hand column from the bottom. Or press
> to enter the right-hand column.
Either way, once you’ve highlighted something in either column, you can press the <
or > keys to hop to the opposite side of the menu; press the , or . keys to highlight

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other commands in the column (even the Shut Down button); or type the first initial
of something’s name to highlight it. (If there’s more than one command that starts
with, say, W, press W repeatedly to cycle through them.)

The Start Menu

Once you’ve highlighted something, you can press Enter to “click” it (open it), or tap
the w key or Esc to close the Start menu and forget the whole thing.
Use the Search box
This thing is awesome. The instant you pop open the Start menu, your insertion point
blinks in the new Start Search box at the bottom of the menu (Figure 1-4). That’s your
cue that you can begin typing the name of whatever you want to open.
Figure 1-4:
As you type, Windows winnows down the list of found
items, letter by letter. (You don’t have to type the full
search term and then press Enter.) If the list of results
is too long to fit the Start menu, click “See more results” below the list. In any case, Windows highlights
the first item in the results. If that’s what you want to
open, press Enter. If not, you can click what you want
to open, or use the arrow keys to walk down the list
and then press Enter to open something.

The instant you start to type, you trigger Windows’s very fast, whole-computer search
function. This search can find files, folders, programs, email messages, address book
entries, calendar appointments, pictures, movies, PDF documents, music files, Web
bookmarks, and Microsoft Office documents, among other things. It also finds anything in the Start menu, making it a very quick way to pull up something without
having to click through a bunch of submenus.

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The Start Menu

You can read the meaty details about search in Chapter 3.

The All Programs List
All Versions

When you click All Programs at the bottom of the Start menu, you’re shown an important list indeed: the master catalog of every program on your computer. You can
jump directly to your word processor, calendar, or favorite game, for example, just
by choosing its name from the StartÆAll Programs menu.
Clearly, Microsoft has abandoned the superimposed-menus effect of Windows XP.
Rather than covering up the regularly scheduled Start menu, the All Programs list
replaces it (or at least the left-side column of it).
You can restore the original left-side column by clicking Back (at the bottom of the
list) or pressing the Esc key.
Tip: When the Start menu is open, you can open the All Programs menu in a number of ways: by clicking
the phrase “All Programs,” by pointing to it and keeping the mouse still for a moment, or by pressing the ,
key (to highlight All Programs) and then tapping the Enter key, the > key, or the space bar. Just for keyboard
fanatics: Once the programs list is open, you can also choose anything in it without involving the mouse.
Just type the first letter of a program or folder name, or press the , and . keys, to highlight the item you
want. Then press Enter to seal the deal.

Folders
As you’ll quickly discover, the All Programs list doesn’t list just programs. It also
houses a number of folders.
nostalgia corner

Restoring the Traditional Folder Listings
Some of the commands that populated the Start menus of
previous Windows versions no longer appear in the Start
menu of Windows 7. Microsoft is trying to make Windows
look less overwhelming.
But if you miss some of the old folders—Favorites, Printers,
and the Run command, for example—it’s easy enough to
put them back.
Right-click the Start menu. From the shortcut menu, choose
Properties. Now the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties
dialog box appears; click the Customize button.

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windows 7: the missing manual

In the scrolling list, you’ll find checkboxes and buttons that
hide or show all kinds of things that can appear in the right
column of the Start menu: Computer, Connect To, Control
Panel, Default Programs, Documents, Favorites, Games,
Help, Music, Network, Pictures, Printers, Run, Search, and
System Administrative Tools (a set of utilities described in
Chapter 20).
Click OK twice to return to the desktop and try out your
changes.

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Software-company folders
Some of them bear the names of software you’ve installed; you might see a folder called,
for example, PowerSoft or Logitech. These generally contain programs, uninstallers,
instruction manuals, and other related junk.

The All
Programs List

Tip: Submenus, also known as cascading menus, have been largely eliminated from the Start menu. Instead,
when you open something that contains other things—like a folder listed in the Start menu—you see its contents
listed beneath, indented slightly, as shown in Figure 1-3. Click the folder name again to collapse the sublisting.
Keyboard freaks should note that you can also open a highlighted folder in the list by pressing the Enter key
(or the > key). Close the folder by pressing Enter again (or the < key).

Program-group folders
Another set of folders is designed to trim down the Programs menu by consolidating related programs, like Games, Accessories (little single-purpose programs), and
Maintenance. Everything in these folders is described in Chapter 7.
The Startup folder
This folder contains programs that open automatically every time you start Windows.
This can be a very useful feature. For instance, if you check your email every morning, you may as well save yourself a few mouse clicks by putting your email program
into the Startup folder. If you spend all day long word processing, you may as well
put Microsoft Word in there.
In fact, although few PC users suspect it, what you put into the Startup folder doesn’t
have to be an application. It can just as well be a document you consult every day. It
can even be a folder or disk icon whose window you’d like to find open and waiting
each time you turn on the PC. (The Documents folder is a natural example.)
Of course, you may be interested in the Startup folder for a different reason: to stop
some program from launching itself. This is a particularly common syndrome if
somebody else set up your PC. Some program seems to launch itself, unbidden, every
time you turn the machine on.
Tip: All kinds of programs dump components into this folder. Over time, they can begin to slow down your
computer. If you’re having trouble determining the purpose of one startup program or another, visit this
Web page, which provides a comprehensive list of every startup software nugget known, with instructions
for turning off each one: http://www.sysinfo.org/startupinfo.html.

Fortunately, it’s easy to either add or remove items from the Startup folder:
•• Deleting something. With the Startup folder’s listing visible in the All Programs
menu, right-click whatever you want to delete. From the shortcut menu, choose
Delete. Click Yes to send the icon to the Recycle Bin.
Enjoy your newfound freedom from self-launching software.

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The All
Programs List

•• Adding something. With the All Programs list open, right-click the Startup folder
and, from the shortcut menu, choose Open. You’ve just opened the Startup folder
itself.
Once its window is open, navigate to the disk, folder, program, or document icon
you want to add. (Navigating to your files and folders is described in the following chapters.)
Using the right mouse button, drag the icon directly into the Startup window,
as shown in Figure 1-5. When you release the button, a shortcut menu appears;
from the shortcut menu, choose Create Shortcuts Here.
Figure 1-5:
It’s easy to add a
program or document icon to your
Startup folder so that
it launches automatically every time you
turn on the computer.
Here, a document
from the Documents
library is being
added. You may
also want to add a
shortcut for the Documents library itself,
which ensures that
its window will be
open and ready each
time the computer
starts up.

nostalgia corner

Return to the Old Start Menu
The fancily redesigned Start menu has its charms, including its translucent look. But as we all know, change can be
stressful.
In Windows Vista, you could return to the organization and
design of the old, single-column Start menu. (It was an option in the Start menu Properties dialog box.) But it’s gone in

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Windows 7. Microsoft seems to be saying, “Come on, now,
people. Seriously. Let’s move on.”
If you’re among the Windows 2000 crowd who genuinely
preferred the old arrangement, the free CSMenuLanucher
program can do the job for you. It’s available from this book’s
“Missing CD” page at www.missingmanuals.com.

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Close any windows you’ve opened. From now on, each time you turn on or restart
your computer, the program, file, disk, or folder you dragged will open by itself.

The All
Programs List

Start Menu: The Right Side
All Versions

As noted earlier, the left-hand Start menu column, the white column, is your launcher
for program, files, and folders you use a lot. The right side, the dark column, contains
links to important functions and places. Here’s a whirlwind tour of these options,
from top to bottom.

StartÆ[Your Name]: The Personal Folder
As the box on this page makes clear, Windows keeps all your stuff—your files, folders, email, pictures, music, bookmarks, even settings and preferences—in one handy,
central location: your Personal folder. This folder bears your name, or whatever account
name you typed when you installed Windows 7.
As described in Chapter 23, everyone with an account on your PC has a Personal folder.
frequently asked question

Secrets of the Personal Folder
Why did Microsoft bury my files in a folder three levels deep?
Because Windows has been designed for computer sharing.
It’s ideal for any situation where family members, students,
or workers share the same PC.
Each person who uses the computer will turn on the machine
to find his own separate desktop picture, set of files, Web
bookmarks, font collection, and preference settings. (You’ll
find much more about this feature in Chapter 23.)
Like it or not, Windows considers you one of these people.
If you’re the only one who uses this PC, fine—simply ignore
the sharing features. But in its little software head, Windows
still considers you an account holder, and stands ready to
accommodate any others who should come along.
In any case, now you should see the importance of the Users
folder in the main hard drive window. Inside are folders—the
Personal folders—named for the people who use this PC. In
general, nobody is allowed to touch what’s inside anybody
else’s folder.

If you’re the sole proprietor of the machine, of course, there’s
only one Personal folder in the Users folder—named for
you. (You can ignore the Public folder, which is described
on page 774.)
This is only the first of many examples in which Windows
imposes a fairly rigid folder structure. Still, the approach has
its advantages. By keeping such tight control over which files
go where, Windows 7 keeps itself pure—and very, very stable.
(Other operating systems known for their stability, including
Mac OS X, work the same way.)
Furthermore, keeping all your stuff in a single folder makes
it very easy for you to back up your work. It also makes life
easier when you try to connect to your machine from elsewhere in the office (over the network) or elsewhere in the
world (over the Internet), as described in Chapters 26 and 27.

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Start Menu:
The Right Side

Technically, your Personal folder lurks inside the C:ÆUsers folder. But that’s a lot of
burrowing when you just want a view of your entire empire. That’s why your Personal
folder is also listed here, at the top of the Start menu’s right-side column. Choose
this listing to open the folder that you’ll eventually fill with new folders, organize,
back up, and so on.

StartÆDocuments
This command opens up your Documents folder, a very important folder indeed.
It’s designed to store just about all the work you do on your PC—everything except
music, pictures, and videos, which get folders of their own.
Of course, you’re welcome to file your documents anywhere on the hard drive, but
most programs propose depositing newly created documents into the Documents
folder. That principle makes navigation easy. You never have to wonder where you
filed something, since all your stuff is sitting right there in Documents.
Note: The Documents folder actually sits in the ComputerÆLocal Disk (C:)ÆUsersÆ[Your Name] folder.
If you study that path carefully, it should become clear that what’s in Documents when you log in (page 737)
isn’t the same thing other people will see when they log in. That is, each account holder (Chapter 23) has a
different Documents folder, whose contents switch according to who’s logged in.

StartÆPictures, Music
Microsoft assumes (correctly) that most people these days use their home computers for managing digital photos and music collections. As you can probably guess,
the Pictures and Music folders are intended to house them—and these Start menu
commands are quick ways to open them.
In fact, whatever software came with your digital camera or MP3 player probably
dumps your photos into, and sucks your music files out of, these folders automatically. You’ll find much more on these topics in Chapters 14 and 15.

StartÆGames
This item opens the Games folder, where Microsoft has stashed 11 computer games for
your procrastination pleasure. (You get only six in the Starter edition of Windows 7.)
Note: The first time you open the Games folder, a message pops up to ask if you want to use the recommended update and folder settings. If so, Windows will notify you when updates to your games are available;
auto-download rating and genre details about your games; and, in certain folder views, show when you
last played a game.

StartÆComputer
The Computer command is the trunk lid, the doorway to every single shred of software on your machine. When you choose this command, a window opens to reveal
icons that represent each disk drive (or drive partition) in your machine, as shown
in Figure 1-6.

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For example, by double-clicking your hard drive icon and then the various folders on
it, you can eventually see the icons for every single file and folder on your computer.

Start Menu:
The Right Side

StartÆControl Panel
This command opens an extremely important window: the Control Panel, which
houses more than 50 mini-programs that you’ll use to change almost every important setting on your PC. It’s so important, in fact, that it gets a chapter of its own
(Chapter 8).
Figure 1-6:
The Computer
window lists your
PC’s drives—hard
drives, CD drives,
USB flash drives, and
so on; you may see
networked drives
listed here, too. This
computer has two
hard drives, a USB
flash drive, and a
CD-ROM drive. (If
there’s a disk in the
CD drive, you see
its name, not just its
drive letter.) When
you select a disk
icon, the Details
pane (if visible)
shows its capacity
and amount of free
space (bottom).

StartÆDevices and Printers
Yes, kids, it’s a direct link to the Devices and Printers pane of the Control Panel, where
you can fiddle with the settings for various gadgets (cameras, cellphones, headsets,
scanners, fax machines, printers, monitors, mice, and so on). Details in Chapter 18.

StartÆDefault Programs
This command is a shortcut to the Default Programs control panel. It has two functions:
•• To let you specify which program (not necessarily Microsoft’s) you want to use as
your Web browser, email program, instant-messaging program, Java module, and
music player—choices offered by Microsoft to placate the U.S. Justice Department.
Details are on page 319.

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Start Menu:
The Right Side

•• To specify which program opens when you double-click a certain kind of document. For example, if you double-click a JPEG graphic, do you want it to open in
Picasa or Windows Photo Gallery? Details on page 319.
Note: Grizzled, longtime Windows veterans may want to note that this file-association function used to be
called File Types, and it was in the Folder Options window.

StartÆHelp and Support
All Versions

Choosing StartÆHelp and Support opens the Windows Help and Support Center
window (Chapter 5).
Tip: Once again, speed fans have an alternative to using the mouse—just press the F1 key to open the Help
window. (If that doesn’t work, some other program may have Windows’s focus. Try it again after clicking
the desktop.)

StartÆShut down (Sleep, Restart, Log Off…)
All Versions

What should you do with your PC when you’re finished using it for the moment?
Millions of people shut their PCs off, but they shouldn’t; it’s a colossal waste of
time on both ends. When you shut down, you have to wait for all your programs to
close—and then the next morning, you have to reopen everything, reposition your
windows, and get everything back the way you had it.
You shouldn’t just leave your computer on all the time, either. That’s a massive waste
of electricity, a security risk, and a black mark for the environment.
What you should do is put your PC to sleep. The Sleep command, along with Shut
down, Restart, and other relevant options, appears in the “Shut down” pop-up menu
at the lower-right corner of the Start menu.
Click the ˘ to see these commands. As shown in Figure 1-7, these are the options for
finishing your work session:
frequently asked question

StartÆStop
Could someone explain why all the variations of “Shut
down” are in a menu called Start?
The Name-the-Button Committee at Microsoft probably
thought you’d interpret Start to mean “Start here to get
something accomplished.”

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But you wouldn’t be the first person to find it illogical to click
Start when you want to stop. Microsoft probably should have
named the button “Menu,” saving all of us a lot of confusion.

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•• “Switch user.” This command refers to Windows’s accounts feature, in which each
person who uses this PC gets to see her own desktop picture, email account, files,
and so on. (See Chapter 23.)

StartÆShut down

When you choose “Switch user,” somebody else can log into the computer with her
own name and password—to do a quick calendar or email check, for example. But
whatever you had running remains open behind the scenes. After the interloper
is finished, you can log in again to find all your open programs and documents
exactly as you left them.
Note: In Windows XP, there was a Fast User Switching on/off switch. Nowadays, there’s no off switch; Fast
User Switching is in effect full time.

Figure 1-7:
How do you want to stop working
today?
Microsoft offers you six different
ways. It’s all about choice.

•• “Log off.” If you click “Log off,” Windows closes all your open programs and documents (giving you an opportunity to save any unsaved documents first). It then
presents a new Welcome screen (page 766) so that the next person can sign in.
•• Lock. This command locks your computer—in essence, it throws a sheet of inchthick steel over everything you were doing, hiding your screen from view. This is
an ideal way to protect your PC from nosy people who happen to wander by your
desk while you’re away getting coffee or lunch.
All they’ll find on your monitor is the standard Logon screen. They (and even you)
will have to enter your account password to get past it (page 766).
Tip: You can trigger this button entirely from the keyboard. Hit these keys, in sequence: w, > (twice), letter
O. (The underlined letter in the word Lock lets you know that O is the shortcut key.)

•• Restart. This command quits all open programs, and then quits and restarts Windows again automatically. The computer doesn’t actually turn off. (You might do

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StartÆShut down

this to “refresh” your computer when you notice that it’s responding sluggishly,
for example.)
•• Sleep. In the olden days, Windows offered a command called Standby. This special
state of PC consciousness reduced the amount of electricity the computer used,
putting it in suspended animation until you used the mouse or keyboard to begin
working again. Whatever programs or documents you were working on remained
in memory.
When using a laptop on battery power, Standby was a real boon. When the flight
attendant handed over your microwaved chicken teriyaki, you could take a break
without closing all your programs or shutting down the computer.
Unfortunately, there were two big problems with Standby, especially for laptops.
First, the PC still drew a trickle of power this way. If you didn’t use your laptop for
a few days, the battery would silently go dead—and everything you had open and
unsaved would be lost forever. Second, drivers or programs sometimes interfered
with Standby, so your laptop remained on even though it was closed inside your
carrying case. Your plane would land on the opposite coast, you’d pull out the
laptop for the big meeting, and you’d discover that (a) the thing was roasting hot,
and (b) the battery was dead.
The command is now called Sleep, and it doesn’t present those problems anymore.
First, drivers and applications are no longer allowed to interrupt the Sleep process.
No more Hot Laptop Syndrome.
Second, the instant you put the computer to sleep, Windows quietly transfers a copy
of everything in memory into an invisible file on the hard drive. But it still keeps
everything alive in memory—the battery provides a tiny trickle of power—in case
you return to the laptop (or desktop) and want to dive back into work.
If you do return soon, the next startup is lightning-fast. Everything reappears on
the screen faster than you can say, “Redmond, Washington.”
If you don’t return shortly, then Windows eventually cuts power, abandoning what
it had memorized in RAM. (You control when this happens using the advanced
power plan settings described in Chapter 8.) Now your computer is using no power
at all; it’s in hibernate mode.
Fortunately, Windows still has the hard drive copy of your work environment. So
now when you tap a key to wake the computer, you may have to wait 30 seconds or
so—not as fast as 2 seconds, but certainly better than the 5 minutes it would take to
start up, reopen all your programs, reposition your document windows, and so on.
The bottom line: When you’re done working for the moment—or for the day—put
your computer to Sleep instead of shutting it down. You save power, you save time,
and you risk no data loss.
You can send a laptop to Sleep just by closing the lid. On any kind of computer, you
can trigger Sleep by choosing StartÆSleep or by pushing the PC’s power button,
if you’ve set it up that way (see page 40).

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Tip: You can also trigger Sleep entirely from the keyboard by pressing w, then > twice, then S.

StartÆShut down

•• Hibernate. Hibernate mode is a lot like Sleep, except that it doesn’t offer a period
during which the computer will wake up instantly. Hibernate equals the second
phase of Sleep mode, in which your working world is saved to the hard drive.
Waking the computer from Hibernate takes about 30 seconds.
Tip: You can configure your computer to sleep or hibernate automatically after a period of inactivity, or to
require a password to bring it out of hibernation. See page 329 for details.

•• Shut down. This is what most people would call “really, really off.” When you shut
down your PC, Windows quits all open programs, offers you the opportunity to
save any unsaved documents, exits Windows, and turns off the computer.
Truth is, there’s almost no reason to shut down your PC anymore. Sleep is almost
always better all the way around.
The only exceptions have to do with hardware installation. Anytime you have to
open up the PC to make a change (installing memory, hard drives, sound or video
cards), or connect something external that doesn’t just use a USB or FireWire
(1394) port, you should shut the thing down first.
Tip: Once again, it’s worth noting that you can trigger any of these commands entirely from the keyboard;
save your mouse for Photoshop.
Hit the w key to open the Start menu. Then hit the > key twice to open the menu shown in Figure 1-7. At
this point, you can type the underlined letter of the command you want: L for “Log off,” S for Sleep, and so on.

Three Triggers for Sleep/Shut Down—and How to Change Them
You now know how to trigger the Shut down command using the mouse (StartÆShut
down) or by pressing a keyboard sequence. But there are even faster ways.
If you have a laptop, just close the lid. If you have a desktop PC, just press its power
button (π).
In all these cases, though—menu, lid, power button—you can decide whether the
computer shuts down, goes to sleep, hibernates, or just ignores you. That’s really
important, because Microsoft’s proposed responses aren’t always the best ones. For
example, “Shut down” is what’s listed at the bottom of the Start menu, but Sleep is
what you’ll probably want more often.
Here’s how to change the factory setting when you open the Start menu, close the
lid, or hit the power button:
•• Change what the Start menu’s Shut down command says. Right-click the Start
menu. From the shortcut menu, choose Properties. On the Start Menu tab of the
resulting dialog box, use the “Power button action” pop-up menu. You can choose

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StartÆShut down

Switch user, Log off, Lock, Restart, Sleep, Hibernate, or Shut down—whichever
you’d like to see listed at the bottom of the Start menu, where it started out saying
“Shut down” (see Figure 1-8).
Figure 1-8:
In this dialog
box (left),
you can
change what
it says at
the bottom
of the Start
menu (right).
For most
people, the
best option
is Sleep—not
Shut down.

•• Change what happens when you close the lid. Open the Start menu. In the Search
box, start typing power options until you see “Change what closing the lid does” in
the search results. Click that link. In the resulting dialog box, you can choose any
of the usual options (Sleep, Restart, Hibernate, and so on) for “When I close the
lid.” In fact, you can even choose this setting independently for when the laptop
is plugged in and when it’s running on battery, although Sleep is really the best
choice in both cases.
•• Change what happens when you press the power button. Open the Start menu. In
the Search box, start typing power options until you see “Change what the power
buttons do” in the search results. Click that link. In the resulting dialog box, you
can choose any of the usual options (Sleep, Restart, Hibernate, and so on) for
“When I press the power button.” (You can also specify what happens “When I
press the sleep button,” except that your PC probably doesn’t have a sleep button.)

Commands That No Longer Appear
If you’re coming from an earlier version of Windows, you may wonder what became
of a few useful Start menu commands, like Recent Items, Connect To, Network, and
Run. Turns out they’re gone, but not forgotten; you can restore them, if you like, as
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Customizing the Start Menu
All Versions

Customizing the
Start Menu

It’s possible to live a long and happy life without ever tampering with the Start menu.
In fact, for many people, the idea of fiddling with it comes dangerously close to nerd
territory.
Still, Start-menu customizing got a big boost in Windows 7, so you may as well sniff
around to see what Microsoft offers. Besides, knowing how to manipulate the Start
menu listings provides an interesting glimpse into the way Windows works, and
tweaking it can pay off in efficiency down the road.
Note: Thanks to the User Accounts feature described in Chapter 23, any changes you make to the Start menu
apply only to you. Each person with an account on this PC has an independent, customized Start menu.

Start Menu Settings
Microsoft offers a fascinating set of customization options for the Start menu. It’s
hard to tell whether these options were selected by a scientific usability study or by a
dartboard, but you’re likely to find something that suits you.
To view and change the basic options, right-click the Start menu; from the shortcut
menu, choose Properties. Now the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties dialog box
opens (Figure 1-9, top). When you click Customize, you see the dialog box shown
at bottom in Figure 1-9. Here you’re offered an assortment of Start-menu tweaks,
neatly listed in alphabetical order; they affect the Start menu in some fairly simple
yet profound ways.
The hide/show switches for things in the Start menu
Most of the checkboxes in this scrolling list are on/off switches for things that appear
on the right side of the Start menu: Games, Music, Computer, Control Panel, your
Personal folder, Pictures, and so on. If you never use some of these things, then for
heaven’s sake turn them off; you’ll reduce clutter and eliminate that nagging feeling
that you’re not using all of Windows’s features.
Also in this list, though, are checkboxes for items Microsoft didn’t put in the Start menu
but that you, the oddball fringe case, can put there if you like. Here’s what they are:
•• Connect To. This command opens the “Connect to a network” dialog box, a simple
list of all the dial-up, VPN (virtual private networking), and wireless networks your
computer can “see” at the moment. The thing is, in Windows 7, there are easier
ways to see the networks around you (see Chapter 9).
•• Downloads. For decades, novice computer users have been baffled: They download something from the Web but then can’t find where it went. Now you’ll know.
Out of the box, Internet Explorer puts your downloaded files into the Downloads
folder (which is inside your Personal folder). It makes sense to add this item to
your Start menu so you have quick access to it.

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Customizing the
Start Menu

•• Favorites menu. The Favorites menu is a list of your favorite Web sites—the same
ones you’ve bookmarked using Internet Explorer (page 409). If you turn on this
item, you can use the Start menu to launch Internet Explorer and travel directly
to the selected site. (Of course, jump lists, described later in this chapter, provide
a similar feature.)
Figure 1-9:
Top: On this first screen, you can
specify what your PC’s power
button does (shut down? sleep?
restart?) or turn off the listings
of recently used programs. (Turn
these off if you don’t want to risk
your supervisor coming by while
you’re up getting coffee and
noticing that your most recently
used programs are The Sims,
World of Warcraft, Dragon Age,
and Fallout.)
Bottom: Here’s the Customize
Start Menu dialog box.

•• Homegroup. This item adds a direct link to a list of the Windows 7 PCs on your
home network, as described on page 775. Of course, since there’s a link to them
in the Navigation pane of every Explorer window, having it in the Start menu isn’t
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•• Network. There’s no Network item in the Start menu, because you can see all available networked computers right there at the left side of every Explorer window.
Details on networking are in Chapters 23, 24, 25, and 26.

Customizing the
Start Menu

•• Recorded TV. You’d have no reason to use this unless your computer came equipped
with a TV tuner, meaning that it’s a Media Center PC (described on page 547). This
item is a link to the TV shows you’ve recorded on your PC.
•• Recent Items. The Recent Items command is a little redundant. The left side of the
Start menu lists the most recently used programs, and jump lists (page 51) list your
most recently used documents. But if you’re a fan of Recent Items from previous
Windows versions, here you go.
•• Run command. The Run command is a power-user tool that’s actually pretty cool.
It gets a writeup of its own at the end of this chapter; for now, note that you don’t
really need to put it in the Start menu to enjoy it. Just press w+R whenever you
want to run something.
•• System administrative tools. This one is a folder of techie diagnostic tools like
Performance Monitor, Task Scheduler, and Windows Memory Diagnostic. They’re
described later in this book, and they’re way over the heads of most people who
don’t do PCs for a living.
If you are in the market for this sort of tool, the options here let you install a link
to these tools either (a) in the All Programs menu, or (b) both there and in the
right side of the Start menu.
•• Videos. Do you want a link to your Movies folder to appear in the Start menu, just
as Music and Pictures do? If so, knock yourself out.
A note about “Display as menu”
Take a look at the options for Computer, Control Panel, Documents, Downloads,
Games, Music, Personal folder, Pictures, Recorded TV, System administrative tools,
Videos. Beneath each of these headings, you’ll find three options:
•• Display as a link. In other words, “list in my Start menu the usual way.”
frequently asked question

Opening the Control Panel Window When You Can’t
OK, I’m with you—I turned on “Display as a menu” for the
Control Panel, so now I can open any Control Panel program
directly from my Start menu. Trouble is, now I can’t open
the Control Panel window itself! Nothing happens when I
click the StartÆControl Panel command. How do I open
the Control Panel window?

Ah, there’s a troublemaker in every class.
Open the Start menu and then right-click Control Panel.
Choose Open from the shortcut menu. You’re back in
business.

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Customizing the
Start Menu

•• Display as a menu. This option is extremely useful. It means that instead of simply
listing the name of a folder, your Start menu sprouts a submenu listing the contents
of that folder, as shown on the right in Figure 1-10.
Figure 1-10:
Left: When “Display
as a link” is selected
for Control Panel, you
can’t open a particular
Control Panel program
directly. Instead, you
must choose StartÆ
Control Panel, which
opens the Control
Panel window; then it’s
up to you to open the
program you want.
Right: Turning on
“Display as a menu”
saves you a step; you
now get a submenu that
lists each Control Panel
program. By clicking
one, you can open it
directly.

•• Don’t display this item. This option, of course, removes the folder from your Start
menu altogether. That’s a good point to remember if you ever sit down at your
PC and discover that, for example, the Control Panel appears to have disappeared.
More options for the Start menu
A few of the checkboxes in the list aren’t on/off switches for Start menu items, but
rather checkboxes that control the Start menu’s behavior. For example:
•• Enable context menus and dragging and dropping. There’s not much reason to turn
off this checkbox; after all, it has two benefits. First, it lets you customize your Start
menu simply by dragging icons onto it, as described in the next section. Second,
it lets you right-click Start-menu items, which produces a useful shortcut menu
containing commands like Rename and Remove from This List. (If this checkbox
is turned off, then right-clicking Start menu items has no effect.)
•• Highlight newly installed programs. Whenever you (or some techie in the building)
installs a new program into the Start menu, it shows up with colored highlighting
for a few days. The idea, of course, is to grab your attention and make you aware
of your expanded software suite. If you could do without this kind of reminder,
then just turn off this checkbox.
•• Open submenus when I pause on them with the mouse pointer. When this checkbox is turned on, you don’t actually have to click a submenu to view its options.
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•• Search other files and libraries. These options govern the Start menu’s Search
command. “Search with public folders” means “search the Public folder on my
computer.” (You can read more about this folder on page 774.)

Customizing the
Start Menu

The third option here is “Don’t search.” If you select this, the Search command
won’t search files and documents at all. Seems like that would greatly diminish the
usefulness of Search. But this could be a speedy arrangement if you use Search
for opening programs and nothing else. (That assumes, of course, that you leave
“Search programs and Control Panel” turned on, as described next.)
•• Search programs and Control Panel. Suppose you never want the Search command
to pull up the names of programs and Control Panel items—you want it to find
only files, pictures, documents, and so on. In that case, turn off this box.
Note: This option is the inverse of “Search other files and libraries.” If you turn off both of these options,
then the Start menu’s Search box will never find anything, ever. (To prevent that, select one of the two
search options under “Search other files and libraries, and/or turn on “Search programs and Control Panel.”)

•• Sort All Programs menu by name. Yep, here it is, the feature that the world’s compulsives have been waiting for: a self-alphabetizing All Programs list. (All right,
that was uncalled for; truth is, having the list in A-to-Z order can make life easier
for just about anyone.)
Note: If you turn off this option, you can always make the All Programs list snap into alphabetical order on
your command, as described in the tip on page 47.

•• Use large icons. You don’t need a book to explain this one. This option affects the
little icon that appears next to each Start menu item’s name (in the left column—
either the regular Start menu or the All Programs list). Bigger icons are pretty, and
on today’s high-resolution monitors, they may rescue your Start-menu items from
disappearing completely. On the other hand, on smaller monitors, large icons may
limit the number of items the list can hold.
Below the scrolling list
Below the massive list of checkboxes, two additional controls await in the Customize
dialog box:
•• Number of recent programs to display. The number here refers to the lower-left
column of the Start menu, the one that lists programs you’ve used most recently. By
increasing this number, you make the Start menu taller—but you ensure that more
of your favorite programs are listed and ready to launch. If this item is dimmed,
it’s because you’ve turned off “Store and display recently opened items in the Start
menu and the taskbar” (page 53).
•• Number of recent items to display in Jump lists. For details on jump lists, see page
51. If this control is dimmed, it’s because you turned off “Store and display recently
opened items in the Start menu and the taskbar” (page 53).

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Customizing the
Start Menu

Add Your Own Icons to the Start Menu
Usually, when you install a new program, its installer inserts the program’s name and
icon in your StartÆAll Programs menu. There may be times, however, when you want
to add something to the Start menu yourself, such as a folder, document, or even a disk.
The “free” sections of the Start menu
In the following pages, you’ll read several references to the “free” portions of the Start
menu. These are the two areas that you, the lowly human, are allowed to modify
freely—adding, removing, renaming, or sorting as you see fit:
•• The top-left section of the Start menu. This little area lists what Microsoft calls
pinned programs and files—things you use often enough that you want a fairly
permanent list of them at your fingertips.
•• The All Programs menu. This, of course, is the master list of programs (and anything else—documents, folders, disks—you want to see listed).
These two areas are highlighted back in Figure 1-3.
In other words, most of the following techniques don’t work in the right column, nor
the lower-left quadrant of the Start menu, where Windows lists your most recently
used programs.
Microsoft wouldn’t be Microsoft if it didn’t provide at least 437 different ways to do
this job. Here are two of the world’s favorites:
Method 1: Drag an icon directly
1. Locate the icon you want to add to your Start menu.
It can be a program (see the box on page 30), a document, a folder you frequently
access, one of the programs in your Control Panel’s folder, or even your hard drive
or DVD-drive icon. (Adding disks and folders to the Start menu is especially handy,
because it lets you dive directly into their contents without having to drill down
through the Computer window.)
Tip: Adding an application name to your All Programs menu requires that you find the program file, as
described on page 141. To do so, either use the Search command (Chapter 3), or just dig around for it in any
Explorer window. You can find your program files in the ComputerÆLocal Disk (C:)ÆProgram Files folder.

2. Drag it directly onto the Start button.
If you release the mouse now, Windows adds the icon’s name to the bottom of
the “pinned items” list (Figure 1-11, right). You’re now welcome to drag it up or
down within this list.
But if you keep the mouse button pressed as you drag onto the Start button, the
Start menu itself opens. As long as the button is still pressed, you can drag the
new icon wherever you want among the items listed in the top-left section of the
menu (Figure 1-11, left).

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Note: If this drag-and-dropping business doesn’t seem to work, it’s because you’ve turned off “Enable dragging and dropping,” as described in the previous section. And if Windows doesn’t let you drag it anywhere
you like, it’s because you’ve turned on “Sort All Programs menu by name,” also described earlier.

Customizing the
Start Menu

In fact, as long as you haven’t stopped pressing the mouse button, you can even
drag your icon onto the words “All Programs.” Your programs list opens, and you
can deposit whatever you’re dragging anywhere in that menu.
Tip: If “Sort All Programs menu by name” is not turned on, your All Programs list may gradually become
something of a mess.
If you want to restore some order to it—specifically, alphabetical—then right-click anywhere on the open All
Programs menu and choose Sort by Name from the shortcut menu. (This command doesn’t appear if “Sort
All Programs menu by name” is already turned on.)

Figure 1-11:
Left: You can add
something to the
top of your Start
menu by dragging
it onto the Start
button to open
the Start menu,
and then dragging
it into position.
(You can also
drag it onto the All
Programs link and
then anywhere in
that list.)

Drag from a window
or the desktop

Right: When you
release the mouse,
the item is happily
ensconced where
you dropped it.
Remember, too,
that you’re free
to drag anything
up or down in the
“free” areas: the
circled area shown
here, and the All
Programs list.
(One exception:
when alphabetical
sorting is on.)

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Customizing the
Start Menu

Method 2: Use the Start menu folders
Windows builds the All Programs menu by consulting two critical folders:
•• Local Disk (C:)ÆProgramDataÆMicrosoftÆWindowsÆStart MenuÆPrograms
folder. This folder contains shortcuts for programs that are available to everybody
who has an account on your machine (Chapter 23).
•• Local Disk (C:)ÆUsersÆ[your name]ÆAppDataÆRoamingÆMicrosoftÆWindowsÆStart MenuÆPrograms folder. This invisible folder stashes shortcuts for
the programs you have added to the Start menu—and they appear only when you
have logged into the machine.
Therefore, instead of the fancy drag-and-drop scheme described above, you may
prefer to fine-tune your Start menu the low-tech way.
Unfortunately, these folders are normally hidden. Fortunately, you don’t really care;
there’s a quick shortcut to opening them, as described in Figure 1-12. Then, once you’ve
opened the relevant Programs folder, you can add shortcut icons there, remove them,
or rename them. Whatever changes you make are reflected in your All Programs menu.

Removing Icons from the Start Menu
When it comes time to prune an overgrown Start menu, there are two different sets
of instructions, depending on which section of the Start menu needs purging.
1. Navigate to this folder

3. You’ve just added
your own stuff to the
All Programs list!

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2. Load it up

Figure 1-12:
To edit your All Programs menu, edit
its source folders.
To begin, open
the Start menu
and right-click All
Programs; from
the shortcut menu,
choose either Open
All Users (to view
the list of programs
for the masses) or
Open (to see the
list of your personal
programs). Those
commands take
you directly to
the deeply buried
Programs folders
described above.

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•• The left-side column, the All Programs list, and jump lists. Right-click the item
you’ve targeted for extinction, and then, from the shortcut menu, choose either
“Remove from this list” or “Delete.”

Customizing the
Start Menu

In both cases, you’re only deleting the shortcut on the menu. You’re not actually
deleting any software.
•• The right-side column. Open the PropertiesÆCustomize dialog box for the Start
menu (page 30), and then turn off the checkboxes for all the items you want
expunged.
Tip: You can spawn instant shortcuts (page 160) of anything in the left-hand column of the Start menu by
dragging them off the menu—onto the desktop, for example. That’s a handy tactic if you want a desktop icon
for something you use often, so you don’t even have to open the Start menu to get at it.

Renaming Start-Menu Items
Although few people realize it, you can rename anything in the Start menu’s left side
(or in the top half of the right side—like Pictures, Music, or Documents). Open the
Start menu, right-click the item you want to rename, and choose Rename from the
shortcut menu. The command sprouts a little editing box. Type the new name and
then press Enter.

Reorganizing the Start Menu
To change the order of listings in the “free” portions of the Start menu, including
the All Programs list, just drag the items up and down the lists as you see fit. As you
drag, a black line appears to show you the resulting location of your dragging action.
Release the mouse when the black line is where you want the relocated icon to appear.
Tip: If you change your mind while you’re dragging, press the Esc key to leave everything as it was.

You can drag program names from the lower-left section of the Start menu, too—but
only into one of the “free” areas.
Tip: A reminder: If you can’t seem to drag program names around in the All Programs list, it’s probably
because you’ve told Windows to auto-alphabetize this list (page 47).

Add folders to hold submenus
As noted earlier, some items in the All Programs list are actually folders. For example,
clicking Games reveals a submenu of the games that come with Windows (see Figure
1-13).
It’s worthwhile to know that you can create All Programs menu folders of your own and
stock them with whatever icons you like. For instance, you may want to create a folder
for CD-ROM games, eliminating those items from a too-long All Programs menu.
To add a folder to the All Programs menu, follow these steps:

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Customizing the
Start Menu

1. Open the Start menu. Right-click the All Programs command. From the shortcut
menu, choose Open.
You’re about to create subfolders that will show up only when you are logged on. (If
you want to make a change that affects everybody with an account on this computer,
then choose Open All Users from the shortcut menu instead.)
In any case, the Start Menu Explorer window appears.
Figure 1-13:
Some All Programs
menu items have submenu folders and subsubmenu folders. As
you move through the
layers, you’re performing an action known
as “drilling down.”
This phrase shows up
a lot in manuals and
computer books—for
example, “Drill down
to the Calculator to
crunch a few quick
numbers.”

2. Open the Programs folder.
Its contents are arrayed before you, as shown in Figure 1-14.
3. In the window toolbar, click “New folder.”
Or, if your right mouse button hasn’t been getting enough exercise, right-click a
blank spot in the window, and then choose NewÆFolder from the shortcut menu.
(Or just press Shift+Ctrl+N.)
4. When the new folder appears, type a folder name and then press Enter.
Close the window, if you like.
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Tip: You can even create folders within folders in your StartÆAll Programs menu. Just double-click to open
any of the existing folders in the Programs folder, and then repeat from step 3.

Customizing the
Start Menu

Your new folder appears in the folders list of the StartÆAll Programs menu, already
sorted into alphabetical order.
Now you can put your favorite file, folder, disk, or application icons into this new
folder. To do so, drag an icon onto the StartÆAll Programs menu, and then, without releasing the mouse, onto the All Programs link, and then into the new folder/
submenu you created.
Figure 1-14:
Notice that some of the
items in Programs have
folder icons; these are the
folders that will become
submenus in the Start
menu.

Jump Lists
All Versions

There’s one more bit of Start-menu customization left. It’s one of the stars of Windows 7, a new feature called jump lists.
They’re handy submenus that list frequently or recently opened files in each of your
programs. For example, the jump list for Internet Explorer shows the Web sites you

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Jump Lists

visit most often; the jump list for Windows Media Player shows songs you’ve played
a lot lately.
The point, of course, is that you can reopen a file just by clicking its name. Jump lists
can save you time when you want to resume work on something you had open recently
but you’re not in the mood to burrow through folders to find its icon.
Often, jump lists also include shortcut-menu-ish commands, like New Message (for
an email program), Play/Pause (for a jukebox program), or Close All Windows (just
about any program). As Microsoft puts it, it’s like having a separate Start menu for
every single program.
Interestingly enough, the same jump lists appear both in the Start menu and in your
taskbar (Figure 1-15).
Figure 1-15:
Jump lists display
the most recently
opened documents
in each program.
These submenus
show up in the
Start menu (left),
but they also sprout
from the taskbar
when you right-click
a program’s icon
there (right).

You have several ways to make jump lists appear:
•• In the Start menu. A ˘ button next to a program’s name in the Start menu means a
jump list awaits. (In general, a program sprouts a jump list automatically if you’ve
used it to open or play files.)
To open the jump list, either click the ˘ or just point to the program’s name without
clicking. The submenu opens automatically after about half a second.

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Note: If no jump lists ever appear, it’s probably because you’ve turned this feature off. To turn it back on,
right-click the Start menu. From the shortcut menu, choose Properties. Turn on “Store and display recently
opened items in the Start menu and the taskbar.” (Yes, that’s the on/off switch for jump lists.) Click OK.

Jump Lists

And if the submenu doesn’t pop open by itself when you point without clicking, you’ve probably turned
that feature off, too. To turn it back on, right-click the Start menu. From the shortcut menu, choose Properties. Click Customize. Turn on “Open submenus when I pause on them with the mouse pointer.” Click OK.

•• On the taskbar. The nearly identical jump list appears when you right-click a
program’s icon on your taskbar (page 101).
Actually, there’s a second, secret way to make the jump list appear: Swipe upward
from the program’s icon. (That is, give the mouse a flick upward while you’re
clicking.)
This technique isn’t such a huge benefit when you’re using a mouse or trackpad.
But if you’re using a touchscreen computer, where right-clicking can be a little
hard to figure out, you’ll be glad to have this alternative.
Figure 1-16:
Suppose there’s a
document you refer
to a lot, and you
don’t want it to vanish from its program’s
jump list. Just point
to its name without
clicking, and then
click the pushpin icon
(left). Now there’s
a new section in
the jump list called
Pinned, where that
document will remain
undisturbed until you
unpin it by clicking
the pushpin again
(right).

Pinning
In general, jump lists maintain themselves. Windows decides which files you’ve opened
or played most recently or most frequently and builds the jump lists accordingly. New
document listings appear, older ones vanish, all without your help.

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Jump Lists

You can, however, pin an item to a program’s jump list so it doesn’t disappear. It’s out
of Windows’s clutches, at least until you unpin it. Figure 1-16 shows the technique.

Jump List Caveats
Jump lists are great and all, but you should be aware of a few things:
•• They don’t know when you’ve deleted a document or moved it to another folder
or disk; they continue to list the file even after it’s gone. In that event, clicking the
document’s listing produces only an error message. And you’re offered the chance
to delete the listing (referred to as “this shortcut” in the error message) so you
don’t confuse yourself again the next time.
•• Some people consider jump lists a privacy risk, since they reveal everything you’ve
been up to recently to whatever spouse or buddy happens to wander by. (You
know who you are.)
In that case, you can turn off jump lists, or just the incriminating items, as described next.
Tip: Of course, even if you turn off jump lists, there’s another easy way to open a document you’ve recently
worked on—from within the program you used to create it. Many programs maintain a list of recent documents in the File menu.

Jump List Settings
There are all kinds of ways to whip jump lists into submission. For example:
•• Turn off jump lists. If the whole idea of Windows (or your boss) tracking what
you’ve been working on upsets you, you can turn this feature off entirely. To do
that, right-click the Start menu. From the shortcut menu, choose Properties. Turn
off “Store and display recently opened items in the Start menu and taskbar” and
click OK.
•• Delete one item from a jump list. For privacy, for security, or out of utter embarrassment, you may not want some file or Web site’s name to show up in a jump
list. Just right-click and, from the shortcut menu, choose “Remove from this list.”
•• Clear a jump list completely. At other times, you may want to wipe out all your
jump lists—and all your tracks. To do that, right-click the Start menu. From the
shortcut menu, choose Properties. Turn off the checkbox that says “Store and
display recently opened items in the Start menu and taskbar” (that’s the master
on/off switch for jump lists). Click Apply; you’ve just erased all the jump lists.
If you didn’t intend to turn off jump lists for good, though, turn the “Store and
display” checkbox back on again before clicking OK. Your jump lists are now ready
to start memorizing new items.
•• Change the number of documents in the list. Ordinarily, jump lists track the 10
most recent (or most frequently used) items, but you can goose that number up

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or down. To do that, right-click the Start menu. From the shortcut menu, choose
Properties. Click Customize. Adjust the “Number of recent items to display in Jump
Lists” item at the bottom of the dialog box, and then click OK.

Jump Lists

Tip: Jump-list items are draggable. For example, suppose you’re composing an email message, and you
want to attach your latest book outline. If it’s in your Start menu, in a jump list, you can drag the document’s
icon directly from the jump list into your email message to attach it. Cool.

The Run Command
All Versions

The Start menu in a fresh installation of Win7 doesn’t include the Run command.
But power users and über-geeks may well want to put it back in the Start menu, following the instructions on page 30. (Or don’t bother. Whenever you want the Run
command, you can just press w+R, or type run into the Start menu’s Search box and
then hit Enter.)
Figure 1-17:
Top: The last Run command you entered
appears automatically in the Open text box.
You can use the drop-down list to see a list
of commands you’ve previously entered.
Bottom: The Run command knows the
names of all your folders and also remembers the last few commands you typed here.
As you go, you’re shown the best match
for the characters you’re typing. When the
name of the folder you’re trying to open
appears in the list, click it to prevent having
to type the rest of the entry.

The Run command gets you to a command line, as shown in Figure 1-17. A command
line is a text-based method of performing a task. You type a command, click OK, and
something happens as a result.

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The Run Command

Note: The command line in the Run dialog box is primarily for opening things. Windows 7 also comes
with a program called Command Prompt that offers a far more complete environment—not just for opening
things, but for controlling and manipulating them. Power users can type long sequences of commands and
symbols in Command Prompt.

Working at the command line is becoming a lost art in the world of Windows, because
most people prefer to issue commands by choosing from menus using the mouse.
However, some old-timers still love the command line, and even mouse-lovers encounter situations when a typed command is the only way to do something.
If you’re a PC veteran, your head probably teems with neat Run commands you’ve
picked up over the years. If you’re new to this idea, however, the following are a few
of the useful and timesaving functions you can perform with the Run dialog box.

Open a Program
For example, you can use the Run command as a program launcher. Just type any
program’s program filename in the Open text box and then press Enter. For both
pros and novices, it’s frequently faster to launch a program this way than to click the
StartÆAll Programs menu with the mouse.
Unfortunately, the program filename isn’t the same as its plain-English name; it’s a
cryptic, abbreviated version. For example, if you want to open Microsoft Word, you
must type winword. That’s the actual name of the Word program icon as it sits in
your ComputerÆLocal Disk (C:)ÆProgram FilesÆMicrosoft OfficeÆOffice folder.
Some other common program filenames are here:
Program’s real name
iexplore
explorer
write
msworks
msimn
wmplayer
control
regedit
cleanmgr
defrag
calc

Program’s familiar name
Internet Explorer
Windows Explorer
WordPad
Microsoft Works
Mail
Windows Media Player
Classic Control Panel
Registry Editor
Disk Cleanup
Disk Defragmenter
Calculator

To discover the real filename of a certain program, open ComputerÆLocal Disk (C:)
ÆProgram Files. Inspect the folders there; with the window in Details view, you’ll be
able to spot the icons whose type is “application.”
Note: True, the Start Search box at the bottom of the Start menu offers another way to find and open any
program without taking your hands off the keyboard. But the Run method is more precise, and may require
less effort because you’re not typing the entire program name.

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In fact, keyboard lovers, get this: You can perform this entire application-launching
stunt without using the mouse at all. Just follow these steps in rapid succession:

The Run Command

1. Press w+R.
That’s the keyboard shortcut for the Run command, whose dialog box now opens.
2. Type the program file’s name in the Open box.
If you’ve typed the name before, just type a couple of letters; Windows fills in the
rest of the name automatically.
3. Press Enter.
Windows opens the requested program instantly. Keystrokes: 4; Mouse: 0.

Open Any Program or Document
Using the Run dialog box is handy for opening favorite applications, because it requires so few keystrokes. But you can also use the Run dialog box to open any file
on the computer.
The trick here is to type in the entire path of the program or document you want.
(See the box on page 58 if you’re new to the idea of file paths.) For example, to open
the family budget spreadsheet that’s in Harold’s Documents folder, you might type
C:\Users\Harold\Documents\familybudget.xls.
Of course, you probably wouldn’t actually have to type all that, since the AutoComplete
pop-up menu offers to complete each folder name as you start to type it.
Tip: Typing the path in this way is also useful for opening applications that don’t appear in the StartÆAll
Programs menu. (If a program doesn’t appear there, you must type its entire pathname—or click Browse to
hunt for its icon yourself.)
For example, some advanced Windows utilities (including the Registry Editor, an advanced diagnostic program)
are accessible only through the command line. You also need to use the Run command to open some older
command-line programs that don’t come with a listing in the All Programs menu.

Open a Drive Window
When you click Computer in your Start menu, you see that Windows assigns a letter
of the alphabet to each disk drive attached to your machine—the hard drive, the DVD
drive, the floppy drive, and so on. The floppy drive is A:, the hard drive is usually C:,
and so on. (There hasn’t been a B: drive since the demise of the two-floppy computer.)
By typing a drive letter followed by a colon (for example, C:) into the Run box and
pressing Enter, you make a window pop open, showing what’s on that drive.

Open a Folder Window
You can also use the Run dialog box to open the window for any folder on your
machine. To do so, type a backslash followed by the name of a folder (Figure 1-17,

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The Run Command

bottom of screen). You might type, for example, the first few letters of \Program Files
to see your complete software collection.
Note: The Run command assumes you’re opening a folder on Drive C. If you want to open a folder on a
different drive, add the drive letter and a colon before the name of the folder (for example, D:\data).

If you’re on a network, you can even open a folder that’s sitting on another computer
on the network. To do so, type two backslashes, the computer’s name, and then the
shared folder’s name. For instance, to access a shared folder called Budgets on a computer named Admin, enter \\admin\budgets. (See Chapter 26 for more on sharing
folders over the network.)
It might make you feel extra proficient to know that you’ve just used the Universal
Naming Convention, or UNC, for the shared folder. The UNC is simply the twobackslash, computer name\folder name format (for example: \\ComputerName\
foldername).
Tip: In any of these cases, if you don’t remember the precise name of a file or folder you want to open in the
Run dialog box, then click the Browse button to display the Browse dialog box, as shown in Figure 1-17, bottom.

Connect to a Web Page
You can jump directly to a specific Web page by typing its Web address (URL)—such
as http://www.bigcompany.com—into the Run dialog box and then pressing Enter. You
don’t even have to open your Web browser first.
Once again, you may not have to type very much; the drop-down list in the Run dialog
box lists every URL you’ve previously entered. Simply click one (or press the . key to
highlight the one you want, and then press Enter) to go to that site.
up to speed

The Path to Enlightenment about Paths
Windows is too busy to think of a particular file as “that family
album program in the Program Files folder, which is in the
Programs folder on the C drive.” Instead, it uses shorthand
to specify each icon’s location on your hard drive—a series
of disk and folder names separated by backslashes, like this:
C:\program files\pbsoftware\beekeeperpro.exe.
This kind of location code is that icon’s path. (Capitalization
doesn’t matter, even though you may see capital letters in
Microsoft’s examples.)

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You’ll encounter file paths when using several important
Windows features. The Run dialog box described in this
section is one. The address bar at the top of every Explorer
window is another, although Microsoft has made addresses
easier to read by displaying triangle separators in the address
bar instead of slashes. (That is, you now see Users ™ Casey
instead of Users\Casey.)
Try not to be confused by the fact that Web addresses use
forward slashes (/) instead of backslashes (\)!

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chapter

2

Explorer, Windows,
& the Taskbar

W

indows got its name from the rectangles on the screen—the windows—
where all your computer activity takes place. You look at a Web page in a
window, type into a window, read email in a window, and look at lists of
files in a window. But as you create more files, stash them in more folders, and open
more programs, it’s easy to wind up paralyzed before a screen awash with cluttered,
overlapping rectangles.
Fortunately, Windows has always offered icons, buttons, and other inventions to help
you keep these windows under control—and Windows 7 positively crawls with them.

Universal Window Controls
All Versions

As Figure 2-1 shows, a lot has changed in windows since the Windows of a few years
ago. If you’re feeling disoriented, firmly grasp a nearby stationary object and read
the following breakdown.
Here are the controls that appear on almost every window, whether in an application
or in Explorer:
•• Title bar. It’s really not much of a title bar anymore, since the window’s title only
rarely appears here (Figure 2-1). But this big, fat top strip is still a giant handle
you can use to drag a window around.

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Universal Window
Controls

Control menu

Tip: The title bar offers two great shortcuts for maximizing a window, making it expand to fill your entire
screen exactly as though you had clicked the Maximize button described below. Shortcut 1: Double-click the
title bar. (Double-click it again to restore the window to its original size.) Shortcut 2: Drag the title bar up
against the top of your monitor. That maximizing shortcut is new in Windows 7.

Address bar

Title bar

Minimize, Maximize, Close

Toolbar

Scroll
bar

Figure 2-1:
All windows have
the same basic ingredients, making it
easy to become an
expert in window
manipulation. This
figure shows an
Explorer (desktop)
window—a disk or
folder—but you’ll
encounter the same
elements in application windows.
(To open a new
Explorer window,
double-click a
folder, or click the
Explorer icon—looks
like a filing folder—
on your taskbar, or
press w+E.)

•• Window edges. You can reshape a window by dragging any edge except the top.
Position your cursor over any border until it turns into a double-headed arrow.
Then drag inward or outward to make the window smaller or bigger. (To resize a
full-screen window, click the “restore down” button first.)
Tip: You can resize a window in two dimensions at once by dragging one of its corners. Sometimes a dotted
triangle appears at the lower-right corner, sometimes not; in either case, all four corners work the same way.

On most computers, window edges are also transparent, revealing a slightly blurry
image of what’s underneath. (That’s the Aero effect at work; see page 25.) Truth be
told, being able to see what’s underneath the edges of your window (sort of) doesn’t
really offer any particular productivity advantage. Sure does look cool, though.
•• Minimize, Maximize, [restore down]. These three window-control buttons, at the
top of every Windows window, cycle a window among its three modes—minimized,
maximized, and restored, as described on page the following pages.
•• Close button. Click the X button to close the window. Keyboard shortcut: Press
Alt+F4.

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Tip: Isn’t it cool how the Minimize, Maximize, and Close buttons “light up” when your cursor passes over
them? (At least they do if you’ve got Aero, as described in Chapter 1.)

Universal Window
Controls

Actually, that’s not just a gimmick; it’s a cue that lets you know when the button is clickable. You might not
otherwise realize, for example, that you can close, minimize, or maximize a background window without first
bringing it forward. But when the background window’s Close box beams bright red, you know.

•• Scroll bar. A scroll bar appears on the right side or bottom of the window if the
window isn’t large enough to show all its contents.
•• Control menu. In Windows XP and earlier versions, there was a tiny icon in the
upper-left corner of every Explorer window. It was a menu of commands for sizing, moving, and closing the window.
In Windows 7, the Control menu is invisible. But if you click where it’s supposed
to be, the menu opens. It’s clearly intended for use only by the initiated who pass
on the secret from generation to generation.
One of the Control menu’s commands is Move. It turns your cursor into a fourheaded arrow; at this point, you can move the window by dragging any part of
it, even the middle. Why bother, since you can always just drag the top edge of a
window to move it? Because sometimes, windows get dragged past the top of your
screen. You can hit Alt+space to open the Control menu, type M to trigger the Move
command, and then move the window by pressing the arrow keys (or by dragging
any visible portion). When the window is where you want it, hit Enter to “let go,”
or the Esc key to return the window to its original position.
Tip: You can double-click the Control menu spot to close a window.

Sizing, Moving, and Closing Windows
A Windows window can cycle among three altered states.
Maximized
A maximized window is one that fills the screen, edge to edge, so you can’t see anything
behind it. It gets that way when you do one of these things:
•• Click its Maximize button (identified in Figure 2-1).
•• Double-click the title bar.
•• Drag the window up against the top of the screen. (That’s a new technique in
Windows 7, as described below.)
•• Press w+,. (That’s also new in Windows 7, and it’s awesome.)
•• Press Alt+space, then X. (That’s the clumsy old key sequence.)

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Universal Window
Controls

Maximizing the window is an ideal arrangement when you’re surfing the Web or
working on a document for hours at a stretch, since the largest possible window
means the least possible scrolling.
Once you’ve maximized a window, you can restore it to its usual, free-floating state
in any of these ways:
•• Drag the window away from the top edge of the screen.
•• Double-click the title bar.
•• Click the Restore Down button (C). (The Maximize button looks like that only
when the window is, in fact, maximized.)
•• Press w+.. (New in Windows 7.)
Tip: If the window isn’t maximized, this keystroke minimizes it instead.

•• Press Alt+space, then R.
Minimized
When you click a window’s Minimize button (M), the window gets out of your way.
It shrinks down into the form of a button on your taskbar, at the bottom of the
screen. Minimizing a window is a great tactic when you want to see what’s behind it.
Keyboard shortcut: w+..
You can bring the window back, of course (that’d kind of be a bummer otherwise).
Point to the taskbar button that represents that window’s program. For example, if
you minimized an Explorer (desktop) window, point to the Explorer icon.
If Aero is working (page 23), the program’s button sprouts handy thumbnail miniatures of the minimized windows when you point to it without clicking. Click a
window’s thumbnail to restore it to full size. (You can read more about this trick
later in this chapter.)
If you’re in a non-Aero mode, the program’s button sprouts the names of the minimized windows. Click the window name you want to bring it back again.
Tip: In Windows 7, there’s a cool twist on minimizing, described in the following section, called Aero Shake.

Restored
A restored window is neither maximized nor minimized; it’s a loose cannon, floating
around on your screen as an independent rectangle. Because its edges aren’t attached
to the walls of your monitor, you can make it any size you like by dragging its borders.

Moving a Window
Moving a window is easy—just drag the big, fat top edge.

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Closing a Window
Microsoft wants to make absolutely sure you’re never without some method of closing
a window. It offers at least nine ways to do it:

Universal Window
Controls

•• Click the Close button (the X in the upper-right corner).
Tip: If you’ve managed to open more than one window, Shift-click that button to close all of them.

•• Press Alt+F4. (This one’s worth memorizing. You’ll use it everywhere in Windows.)
•• Double-click the window’s upper-left corner.
•• Click the invisible Control menu in the upper-left corner, and then choose Close
from the menu.
•• Right-click the window’s taskbar button (see page 105), and then choose Close
from the shortcut menu.
•• Point to a taskbar button without clicking; if you have Aero working (page 23),
thumbnail images of its windows appear. Point to a thumbnail; an X button appears in its upper-right corner. Click it.
•• Right-click the window’s title bar (top edge), and choose Close from the shortcut
menu.
•• In an Explorer window, choose OrganizeÆClose. In many other programs, you
can choose FileÆClose.
•• Quit the program you’re using, log off, or shut down the PC.
Be careful. In many programs, including Internet Explorer, closing the window also
quits the program entirely.
Tip: If you see two X buttons in the upper-right corner of your screen, then you’re probably using a program
like Microsoft Excel. It’s what Microsoft calls an MDI, or multiple document interface program. It gives you a
window within a window. The outer window represents the application itself; the inner one represents the
particular document you’re working on.
If you want to close one document before working on another, be careful to click the inner Close button. If
you click the outer one, you’ll exit the entire application.

Layering Windows
When you have multiple windows open on your screen, only one window is active,
which affects how it works:
•• It’s in the foreground, in front of all other windows.
•• It’s the window that “hears” your keystrokes and mouse clicks.
•• Its Close button is red. (Background windows’ Close buttons are transparent or
window-colored, at least until you point to them.)

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Universal Window
Controls

As you would assume, clicking a background window brings it to the front.
Tip: And pressing Alt+Esc sends an active window to the back. Bet you didn’t know that one!

And what if it’s so far back that you can’t even see it? That’s where Windows’s windowmanagement tools come in; read on.
Tip: For quick access to the desktop, clear the screen by clicking Show Desktop—the skinny rectangle at the
far right end of the taskbar—or by pressing w+D. Pressing that keystroke again brings all the windows back
to the screen exactly as they were.

New Window Tricks in Windows 7
Home Premium • Professional • Enterprise • Ultimate

There are a few new shortcuts in Windows 7, expressly designed for managing windows. Most of them involve some clever mouse gestures—special dragging techniques.
Thanks to those mouse movements and the slick animations you get in response,
goofing around with your windows may become the new Solitaire.

Aero Snap
Microsoft applies that name—Aero Snap—to a set of expando-window tricks.
Note: Despite the word Aero in the name, the Snap features work in the Home Basic and Starter editions
of Windows 7, too.

Here’s the rundown:
•• Maximize a window by dragging its title bar against the top edge of your monitor.
•• Restore a maximized window by dragging its title bar down from the top of the
screen.
•• Make a full-height, half-width window by dragging it against one side of your
screen.
Tip: Actually, it’s faster to use the new keyboard shortcuts: w+< to snap the window against the left side,
or w+> to snap it against the right. To move the window back again, either hit the same keystroke a couple
more times (it cycles left, right, and original spot, over and over), or use the w key with the opposite arrow key.
And if you have more than one monitor, add the Shift key to move the frontmost window to the next monitor, left or right.

And why would you bother? Well, a full-height, half-width window is ideal for
reading an article, for example. You wouldn’t want your eyes to keep scanning the
text all the way across the football field of your screen; and you wouldn’t want to

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spend a lot of fussy energy trying to make the window tall enough to read without
scrolling a lot. This gesture sets things up for you with one quick drag.

New Window Tricks
in Windows 7

But this half-screen-width trick is even more useful when you apply it to two windows, as shown in Figure 2-2. Now it’s simple to compare two windows’ contents,
or to move or copy stuff between them.
Figure 2-2:
Parking two windows
side by side is a
convenient preparation
for copying information
between them or comparing their contents—
and it’s super-easy in
Windows 7. Just drag the
first window against the
right or left side of your
screen; then drag the
second window against
the opposite side
(shown here in progress
on the right). Each one
gracefully snaps to
the full height of your
monitor, but only half
its width.

•• Make a window the full height of the screen. This trick never got much love from
Microsoft’s marketing team, probably because it’s a little harder to describe. But
it can be very useful.
NostalGia corner

Turn Off All the Snapping and Shaking
It’s cool how Windows now makes a window snap against
the top or side of your screen. Right? I mean, it is better
than before, right?
It’s perfectly OK to answer, “I don’t think so. It’s driving me
crazy. I don’t want my operating system manipulating my
windows on its own.”
In that case, you can turn off the snapping and shaking
features. Open the Start menu. Type enough of the word

shaking until you see “Turn off automatic window arrangement.” Click it.
You’ve just opened the “Make the mouse easier to use”
control panel. At the bottom, turn on “Prevent windows from
being automatically arranged when moved to the edge of
the screen,” and then click OK.
From now on, windows move only when and where you
move them. (Shaking a window’s title bar doesn’t hide other
windows now, either.)

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New Window Tricks
in Windows 7

It’s not the same as the previous trick; this one doesn’t affect the width of the
window. It does, however, make the window exactly as tall as your screen, sort of
like half-maximizing it; see Figure 2-3.
Tip: There’s a new keyboard shortcut for this new feature: Shift+w+, to create the full-height effect, and
(of course) Shift+w+. to restore the window’s original height.

To restore the window to its original dimensions, drag its top or bottom edge away
from the edge of your screen.
Note: These new window-morphing tricks make a good complement to the traditional “Cascade windows,”
“Show windows stacked,” and “Show windows side by side” commands that appear when you right-click
an empty spot on the taskbar.

Figure 2-3:
The before-andafter effect of the
full-screen-height
feature of Aero
Snap. To make
this work, grab the
bottom edge of
your window (left)
and drag it down
to the bottom edge
of your screen. The
window snaps only
vertically, but maintains its width and
horizontal position
(right).

Aero Shake
If you’ve become fond of minimizing windows—and why not?—then you’ll love this
one. If you give your window’s title bar a rapid back-and-forth shake, you minimize
all other windows. The one you shook stays right where it was (Figure 2-4).
Tip: Aero Shake makes a very snazzy YouTube demo video, but it’s not actually the easiest way to isolate one
window. If the window you want to focus on is already the frontmost window, you can just press w+Home
key to achieve the same effect. Press that combo a second time to restore all the minimized windows.

Handily enough, you can bring all the hidden windows back again, just by giving the
hero window another title-bar shake.

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Note: Dialog boxes (for example, boxes with OK and Cancel buttons) aren’t affected by this Aero Shake
thing—only full-blown windows.

New Window Tricks
in Windows 7

Figure 2-4:
Top: OK, this is the state
of your screen. You want
to have a look at your
desktop—but oy, what a
cluttered mess!
Bottom: So you give this
window’s title bar a little
shake—at least a couple
of horizontal or vertical
back-and-forths—and
boom! All other windows
are minimized to the taskbar, so you can see what
you’re doing. Give the title
bar a second shake to
bring the hidden windows
back again.

The Show Desktop Button
Believe it or not, that bizarre little reflective-looking stick of Trident in the lower-right
corner of your screen—at the right end of your taskbar—is actually a button. It’s the
old Show Desktop button (Figure 2-5), now moved to a new location.

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New Window Tricks
in Windows 7

It has two functions:
•• Point to it without clicking to make all windows completely transparent, leaving
behind only their outlines. (Holding down w+Space bar does the same thing.)
This technique is primarily useful when (a) you want an easier look at your Windows gadgets (page 234), or (b) you want to show people how cool Windows 7 is.
Note: This point-without-clicking thing works only if your PC can handle Aero (page 23) and if you’ve
selected an Aero theme (page 178).

•• Click it to make all windows and dialog boxes disappear completely, so you can
do some work on your desktop. They’re not minimized—they don’t shrink down
into the taskbar—they’re just gone. Click the Show Desktop button a second time
to bring them back from invisible-land.
Tip: Once again, there’s a less flashy, but more efficient keyboard trick that achieves the same effect. Next
time you want to minimize all windows, revealing your entire desktop, press w+M (which you can think of
as M for “Minimize all”). Add the Shift key (Shift+w+M) to bring them all back.

Figure 2-5:
There was a
Show Desktop
button in previous versions of
Windows, but
it’s never been a
vertical column
at the right end
of the taskbar
before (inset). If
you find yourself
triggering it accidentally, you can
turn the feature
off. Right-click the
taskbar; from the
shortcut menu,
choose Properties; turn off the
“Use Aero Peek to
preview the desktop” checkbox,
and click OK.

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Windows Flip (Alt+Tab)

Windows Flip
(Alt+Tab)

All Versions

In its day, the concept of overlapping windows on the screen was brilliant, innovative,
and extremely effective. In that era before digital cameras, MP3 files, and the Web,
managing your windows was easy this way; after all, you had only about three of them.
These days, however, managing all the open windows in all your programs can be
like herding cats. Off you go, burrowing through the microscopic pop-up menus of
your taskbar buttons, trying to find the window you want. And heaven help you if
you need to duck back to the desktop—to find a newly downloaded file, for example,
or to eject a disk. You have to fight your way through 50,000 other windows on your
way to the bottom of the “deck.”
Windows 7 offers the same window-shuffling tricks that were available in previous
editions:
•• Use the taskbar. Clicking a button on the taskbar (page 101) makes the corresponding program pop to the front, along with any of its floating toolbars, palettes, and
so on.
•• Click the window. You can also bring any window forward by clicking any visible
part of it.
•• Alt+Tab. For years, this keyboard shortcut has offered a quick way to bring a different window to the front without using the mouse. If you press Tab while holding
down the Alt key, a floating palette displays the icons of all running programs, as
shown at the top in Figure 2-6. Each time you press Tab again (still keeping the Alt
key down), you highlight the next icon; when you release the keys, the highlighted
program jumps to the front, as though in a high-tech game of duck-duck-goose.
This feature has been gorgeous-ized, as shown in Figure 2-6; if Aero is working,
then all windows turn into invisible outlines except the one you’ve currently tabbed
Figure 2-6:
Alt+Tab highlights
successive icons;
add Shift to move
backward. (Add
the Ctrl key to
lock the display,
so you don’t have
to keep Alt down.
Tab to the icon
you want; then
press the space
bar or Enter.)

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Windows Flip
(Alt+Tab)

to (in Figure 2-6, it’s the Sticky Notes program). Alt+Tab has been renamed, too;
it’s now called Windows Flip.
Tip: If you just tap Alt+Tab without holding down the Alt key, you get an effect that’s often even more useful: You jump back and forth between the last two windows you’ve had open. It’s great when, for example,
you’re copying sections of a Web page into a Word document.

Windows Flip 3D
Home Premium • Professional • Enterprise • Ultimate

If your PC can run Aero (page 23), Microsoft has something much slicker for this
purpose: Flip 3D, a sort of holographic alternative to the Alt+Tab trick.
The concept is delicious. With the press of a keystroke, Windows shrinks all windows
in all programs so that they all fit on the screen (Figure 2-7), stacked like the exploded
view of a deck of cards. You flip through them to find the one you want, and you’re
there. It’s fast, efficient, animated, and a lot of fun.
Tip: You even see, among the other 3-D “cards,” a picture of the desktop itself. If you choose it, Windows
minimizes all open windows and takes you to the desktop for quick access to whatever is there.

Figure 2-7:
These window
miniatures aren’t
snapshots; they’re
“live.” That is, if
anything is changing
inside a window (a
movie is playing, for
example), you’ll see
it right on the 3-D
miniature.
By the way: Don’t
miss the cool
slow-motion trick
described in Appendix B..

Here’s how you use it, in slow motion. First, press w+Tab. If you keep your thumb
on the w key, you see something like Figure 2-7.
At this point, you can shuffle through the “deck” of windows using either of these
techniques:
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•• Tap the Tab key repeatedly. (Add the Shift key to move backward through the stack.)

Windows Flip 3D

•• Turn your mouse’s scroll wheel toward you. (Roll it away to move backward.)
When the window you want is in front, release the key. The 3-D stack vanishes, and
the lucky window appears before you at full size.

Flip 3D Without Holding Down Keys
That Flip 3D thing is very cool, but do you really want to exhaust yourself by keeping
your thumb pressed on that w key? Surely you’ll wind up with the painful condition
known as Nerd’s Thumb.
Fortunately, you can also use Flip 3D without holding down keys. You can trigger it
using these methods:
•• Add the Ctrl key to the usual keystroke. That is, press w+Ctrl+Tab. This time, you
don’t have to keep any keys pressed.
•• Press the Flip 3D key on your keyboard, if it has one.
Any of these tactics triggers the 3-D floating-windows effect shown in Figure 2-7. At
this point, you can use the arrow keys or your mouse’s scroll wheel to flip through
the open windows without having to hold down any keys. When you see the one you
want, press the Esc key to choose it and bring it to the front.

Explorer Window Controls
All Versions

When you’re working at the desktop—that is, opening Explorer folder windows—
you’ll find a few additional controls dotting the edges. They’re quite a bit different
from the controls of Windows XP and its predecessors.

Address Bar
In a Web browser, the address bar is where you type the addresses of the Web sites
you want to visit. In an Explorer window, the address bar is more of a “bread-crumbs
bar” (a shoutout to Hansel and Gretel fans). That is, it now shows the path you’ve
taken—folders you burrowed through—to arrive where you are now (Figure 2-8).
There are three especially cool things about this address bar:
•• It’s much easier to read. Those ˘ little ˘ triangles are clearer separators of folder
names than the older\slash\notation. And instead of drive letters like C:, you see
the drive names.
Tip: If the succession of nested folders’ names is too long to fit the window, then a tiny H icon appears
at the left end of the address. Click it to reveal a pop-up menu showing, from last to first, the other folders
you’ve had to burrow through to get here.
(Below the divider line, you see, for your convenience, the names of all the folders on your desktop.)

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Explorer Window
Controls

•• It’s clickable. You can click any breadcrumb to open the corresponding folder. For
example, if you’re viewing the Casey ˘ Pictures ˘ Halloween folder, you can click
the word Pictures to backtrack to the Pictures folder.
Figure 2-8:
Top: The notation in the
address bar, Libraries ˘
Pictures ˘ Egypt slideshow,
indicates that you, Casey,
opened your Personal folder
(page 33); then opened the
Pictures library inside; and
finally opened the “Egypt
slideshow” folder inside
that.
Bottom: If you press Alt+D,
the address bar restores the
slash notation of Windows
versions gone by so that
you can type in a different
address.

•• You can still edit it. The address bar of old was still a powerful tool, because you
could type in a folder address directly (using the slash notation).
Actually, you still can. You can “open” the address bar for editing in any of four
different ways: (1) Press Alt+D. (2) Click the tiny icon to the left of the address. (3)
Click any blank spot. (4) Right-click anywhere in the address; from the shortcut
menu, choose Edit Address.
In each case, the address bar changes to reveal the old-style slash notation, ready
for editing (Figure 2-8, bottom).
Tip: After you’ve had a good look, press Esc to restore the ˘ notation.

Components of the address bar
On top of all that, the address bar houses a few additional doodads that make it easy
for you to jump around on your hard drive (Figure 2-9):
•• Back (<), Forward (>). Just as in a Web browser, the Back button opens whatever window you opened just before this one. Once you’ve used the Back button,
you can then use the Forward button to return to the window where you started.
Keyboard shortcuts: Alt+<, Alt+>.

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•• Recent pages list. Click the ≥ to the left of the address bar to see a list of folders
you’ve had open recently; it’s like a multilevel Back button.

Explorer Window
Controls

•• Recent folders list. Click the ≥ at the right end of the address bar to see a pop-up
menu listing addresses you’ve recently typed.
Figure 2-9:
The address bar is crawling with
useful controls and clickable
gizmos. It may take you awhile
to appreciate the difference
between the little ≥ to the left of
the address bar and the one to
its right, though. The left-side one
shows a list of folders you’ve had
open recently; the right-side one
shows addresses you’ve explicitly
typed (and not passed through
by clicking).

Contents lists

Recent typed-in addresses list
Recent places list

•• Contents list. This one takes some explaining, but for efficiency nuts, it’s a gift
from the gods.
It turns out that the little ˘ next to each bread crumb (folder name) is actually a
pop-up menu. Click it to see what’s in the folder name to its left.
How is this useful? Suppose you’re viewing the contents of the USA ˘ Florida ˘
Miami folder, but you decide that the file you’re looking for is actually in the USA
˘ California folder. Do you have to click the Back button, retracing your steps to
the USA folder, only to then walk back down a different branch of the folder tree?
No, you don’t. You just click the ˘ that’s next to the USA folder’s name and choose
California from the list.
•• Refresh (r). If you suspect that the window contents aren’t up to date (for example, that maybe somebody has just dropped something new into it from across
the network), click this button, or press F5, to make Windows update the display.
•• Search box. Type a search phrase into this box to find what you’re looking for
within this window. Page 130 has the details.
What to type into the address bar
When you click the tiny folder icon at the left end of the address bar (or press Alt+D),
the triangle ˘ notation changes to the slash\notation, meaning that you can edit the
address. At this point, the address bar is like the little opening in the glass divider that
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Explorer Window
Controls

lets you speak to your New York cab driver; you tell it where you want to go. Here’s
what you can type there (press Enter afterward):
•• A Web address. You can leave off the http:// portion. Just type the body of the Web
address, such as www.sony.com, into this strip. When you press Enter (or click the
> button, called the Go button), Internet Explorer opens to the Web page you
specified.
Tip: If you press Ctrl+Enter instead of just Enter, you can surround whatever you’ve just typed into the
address bar with http://www. and .com. See Chapter 11 for even more address shortcuts along these lines.

•• A search phrase. If you type some text into this strip that isn’t obviously a Web
address, Windows assumes you’re telling it, “Go online and search for this phrase.”
From here, it works exactly as though you’ve used the Internet search feature
described on page 403.
•• A folder name. You can also type one of several important folder names into this
strip, such as Computer, Documents, Music, and so on. When you press Enter, that
particular folder window opens.
Tip: This window has AutoComplete. That is, if you type pi and then press Tab, the address bar will complete
the word Pictures for you. (If it guesses wrong, press Tab again.)

•• A program or path name. In this regard, the address bar works just like the Run
command (page 55).
In each case, as soon as you begin to type, a pop-up list of recently visited Web sites,
files, or folders appears below the address bar. Windows is trying to save you some
NostalGia corner

Would You Like to See the Menu Bar?
You may have noticed already that there’s something
dramatically different about the menu bar (File, Edit, View,
and so on): It’s gone. Microsoft decided you’d rather have
a little extra space to see your icons.
Fortunately, you can bring it back, in three ways.
Temporarily. Press the Alt key or the F10 key. Presto! The
traditional menu bar reappears. You even get to see the
classic one-letter underlines that tell you what letter keys
you can type to operate the menus without the mouse.
Permanently, all windows. On the task toolbar, choose
OrganizeÆLayoutÆ“Menu bar.” The traditional menu

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bar appears, right above the task toolbar. There it will stay
forever, in all Explorer windows, at least until you turn it off
using the same command.
Permanently, all windows (alternate method). Here’s
another trick that achieves the same thing. Open Folder
Options. (Do that by typing folder op into the Start menu’s
Search box, or by choosing OrganizeƓFolder and search
options” in any Explorer window.)
In the resulting dialog box, click the View tab. Turn on “Always
show menus,” and then click OK.

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typing. If you see what you’re looking for, click it with the mouse, or press the . key
to highlight the one you want and then press Enter.

Explorer Window
Controls

The Task Toolbar
See the colored strip that appears just below the address bar? That’s the task toolbar.
It’s something like a menu bar, in that some of the words on it (like Organize) are
menus. But it’s also like the task pane of Windows XP, in that its buttons are different in different windows. In a folder that contains pictures, you see buttons here like
“Slide show” and “Share with”; in a folder that contains music files, the buttons might
say “Play all” and “Burn.”
Later in this chapter, you’ll meet some of the individual commands in this toolbar.
Note: You can’t hide the task toolbar.

Optional Window Panes
All Versions

Most Explorer windows have some basic informational stuff across the top: the address bar and the task toolbar, at the very least.
But that’s just the beginning. As shown in Figure 2-10, the Organize menu on the task
toolbar lets you hide or show as many as four other strips of information. Turning
them all on at once may make your windows feel a bit claustrophobic, but at least
you’ll know absolutely everything there is to know about your files and folders.
The trick is to choose a pane name from the OrganizeÆLayout command, as shown
in Figure 2-10. Here are the options you’ll find there.
Tip: You can adjust the size of any pane by dragging the dividing line that separates it from the main window.
(You know you’ve got the right spot when your cursor turns into a double-headed arrow.)

Details Pane
This strip appears at the bottom of the window, and it can be extremely useful. It
reveals all kinds of information about whatever icon you’ve clicked in the main part
of the window: its size, date, type, and so on. Some examples:
•• For a music file, the Details pane reveals the song’s duration, band and album
names, genre, the star rating you’ve provided, and so on.
•• For a disk icon, you get statistics about its formatting scheme, capacity, and how
much of it is full.
•• For a Microsoft Office document, you see when it was created and modified, how
many pages it has, who wrote it, and so on.
•• If nothing is selected, you get information about the open window itself: namely,
how many items are in it.

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Optional Window
Panes

•• If you select several icons at once, this pane shows you the sum of their file sizes—a
great feature when you’re burning a CD, for example, and don’t want to exceed the
650 MB limit. You also see the range of dates when they were created and modified.
What’s especially intriguing is that you can edit many of these details, as described
on page 87.
Figure 2-10:
Windows has you
surrounded—or at
least your Explorer
windows.
Top: Use the
Organize menu to
summon or dismiss
each of the optional
panes that can line
a window. A subtle
outline appears
around the icon for
each pane you’ve
summoned. Choose
the name of a pane
once to make it appear and a second
time to hide it.
Bottom: The
taller you make the
Details pane, the
more information
you reveal about the
selected item.

Navigation pane

Details pane

Preview pane

Preview Pane
The Preview pane appears at the right side of the window. That’s right: You can now
have information strips that wrap all four sides of a window.
Anyway, the Preview pane can be handy when you’re examining common file types
like pictures, text files, RTF files, sounds, and movies. As you click each icon, you see
a magnified thumbnail version of what’s actually in that document. As Figure 2-11

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demonstrates, a controller lets you play sounds and movies right there in the Explorer
window, without having to fire up Windows Media Player. (Cool.)

Optional Window
Panes

Tip: You don’t have to fuss with the OrganizeÆLayout command to make the Preview pane appear and
disappear. Instead, you can just click the Preview icon identified in Figure 2-11. That’s new in Windows 7.

Figure 2-11:
In many windows,
the Preview pane
can get in the way,
because it shrinks
the window space
without giving you
much useful information. But when
you’re browsing
movies or sound
files, it’s awesome; it
lets you play the music or the movie right
in place, right in the
window, without
having to open up a
playback program.

Hide/show Preview pane

Now, the Preview pane isn’t omniscient; right out of the box, Windows can’t display the
contents of oddball document types like, say, sheet-music documents or 3-D modeling files. But as you install new programs, the Preview pane can get smarter. Install
Office, for example, and it can display Office files’ contents; install Adobe Acrobat,
and it can show you PDF files. Whether or not the Preview pane recognizes a certain
document type depends on the effort expended by the programmers who wrote its
program (that is, whether they wrote preview handlers for their document types).

Navigation Pane
The Navigation pane is the helpful folder map at the left side of an Explorer window.
It’s come a long way, baby, since the folder hierarchy of Windows XP, and even since
the Navigation pane of Windows Vista. Today, it’s something like a master map of
your computer, with a special focus on the places and things you might want to visit
most often.
Favorite Links list
At the top of the Navigation pane, there’s a collapsible list of Favorites. These aren’t
Web-browser bookmarks, even though Microsoft uses the same term for those. Instead,

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Optional Window
Panes

these are places to which you want quick access. Mostly, that means folders or disks, but
saved searches and libraries are eligible, too (both are described later in this chapter).
Since this pane will be waiting in every Explorer window you open, taking the time
to install your favorite folders here can save you a lot of repetitive folder-burrowing.
One click on a folder name opens the corresponding window. For example, click
the Pictures icon to view the contents of your Pictures folder in the main part of the
window (Figure 2-12).
Figure 2-12:
The Navigation pane
makes navigation very
quick, because you can
jump back and forth
between distant corners
of your PC with a single
click. Folder and disk icons
here work just like normal
ones. You can drag a
document onto a folder
icon to file it there, for
example.

Out of the box, this list offers icons for your desktop and your Downloads folder
(which is actually inside your Personal folder), plus a Recent Places link that reveals
all the folders and Control Panel items you’ve opened recently.
Tip: If you click the word Favorites itself, you open the Favorites window, where the shortcuts for all your
Favorites are stored. Now you have a quick way to add, delete, or rename the items in your favorite links
all at once.

The beauty of this parking lot for containers is that it’s so easy to set up with your
favorite places. For example:
•• Remove an icon by dragging it out of the window entirely and onto the Recycle
Bin icon; it vanishes from the list. Or right-click it and, from the shortcut menu,
choose Remove. (Of course, you haven’t actually removed anything from your PC;
you’ve just unhitched its alias from the Navigation pane.)
Tip: If you delete one of the starter icons (Desktop, Downloads, Recent Places) and later wish you had it
back, no big deal. Right-click the word Favorites; from the shortcut menu, choose “Restore favorite links.”

•• Rearrange the icons by dragging them up or down in the list. Release the mouse
when the thick black horizontal line lies in the desired new location.
Tip: You can also sort this list alphabetically. Right-click the word Favorites; from the shortcut menu, choose
“Sort by name.”
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•• Install a new folder, disk, library, or saved search by dragging its icon off of your
desktop (or out of a window) into any spot in the list.

Optional Window
Panes

•• Adjust the width of the pane by dragging the vertical divider bar right or left.
Tip: If you drag carefully, you can position the divider bar just to the right of the disk and folder icons, thereby
hiding their names almost completely. Some people find it a tidier look; you can always identify the folder
names by pointing to them without clicking.

Libraries
The next section of the Navigation pane lists your libraries. You can read about this
new Windows 7 feature beginning on page 81.
power users' clinic

The Master Explorer-Window Keyboard-Shortcut List
If you arrive home one day to discover that your mouse has
been stolen, or if you simply like using the keyboard, you’ll
enjoy the shortcuts that work in Windows Explorer:
F6 or Tab cycles the “focus” (highlighting) among the
different parts of the window: Favorite Links, address bar,
main window, and so on. (The only caveat: F6 skips over
the Search box, for some reason.)
F4 highlights the address bar and pops open the list of
previous addresses. (Press Alt+D to highlight the address
bar without opening the pop-up menu.)
Alt+< opens the previously viewed window, as though
you’ve clicked the Back button in a browser. Once you’ve
used Alt+<, you can press Alt+> key to move forward
through your recently open windows.
Backspace does the same thing as Alt+<. It, too, walks
you backward through the most recent windows you’ve had
open. That’s a change from Windows XP, when Backspace
meant “up,” as in, “Take me to the parent folder” (see
Alt+,, below).
Alt+double-clicking an icon opens the Properties window
for that icon. (It shows the same sort of information you’d

find in the Details pane.) Or, if the icon is already highlighted,
press Alt+Enter.
Alt+, opens the parent window of whatever you’re looking
at now. For example, if you’ve drilled down into the USAÆ
TexasÆHouston folder, you could hit Alt+, to pop “upward”
to the Texas folder, again for the USA folder, and so on. If
you hit Alt+, enough times, you wind up at your Desktop.
F11 enters or exits full-screen mode, in which the current
window fills the entire screen. Even the taskbar is hidden.
This effect is more useful in a Web browser than at the
desktop, but you never know; sometimes you want to see
everything in a folder.
Shift+Ctrl+N makes a new empty folder.
Shift+Ctrl+E adjusts the Navigation pane so that it reveals
the folder path of whatever window is open right now,
expanding the indented folder icons as necessary.
Press the Ctrl key while turning the mouse’s scroll
wheel to magnify or shrink the icons in your window. You
can also press the letter keys to highlight a folder or file that
begins with that letter, or the , and . keys to “walk” up and
down a list of icons.

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Optional Window
Panes

Homegroup
Next in the Nav pane is the Homegroup heading. Here’s a list of all the Windows 7
computers in your house that you’ve joined into a harmonious unit, using the
HomeGroup networking feature described in Chapter 26.
Computer
The next heading is Computer. When you expand this heading, you see a list of all of
your drives (including the main C: drive), each of which is also expandable (Figure
2-13). In essence, this view can show you every folder on the machine at once. It lets
you burrow very deeply into your hard drive’s nest of folders without ever losing
your bearings.
Figure 2-13:
When you click a disk or
folder in the Navigation
pane—including the Computer hierarchy—the main
window displays its contents,
including files and folders.
Double-click to expand a disk
or folder, opening a new, indented list of what’s inside it;
double-click again to collapse
the folder list. (Clicking the
flippy triangle accomplishes
the same thing.)
At deeper levels of indentation, you may not be able
to read an icon’s full name.
Point to it without clicking to
see an identifying tooltip, as
shown here.

Network
Finally, the Network heading shows your entire network. Not just Windows 7 PCs that
have been connected as a homegroup, but the entire network—Macs, PCs running
older Windows versions, Linux boxes, whatever.
Flippy triangles
As you can see, the Navigation list displays only disks and folders, never individual
files. To see those, look at the main window, which displays the contents (folders and
files) of whatever disk or folder you click.

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To expand a folder or disk that appears in the Nav pane, double-click its name, or click
the tiny ˘ next to its name. You’ve just turned the Nav list into an outline; the contents
of the folder appear in an indented list, as shown in Figure 2-14. Double-click again,
or click the flippy triangle again, to collapse the folder listing.

Optional Window
Panes

By selectively expanding folders like this, you can, in effect, peer inside two or more
folders simultaneously, all within the single Navigation list. You can move files around
by dragging them onto the tiny folder icons, too.

Libraries
All Versions

Libraries are new in Windows 7. They’re like folders, except that they can display the
contents of other folders from all over your PC—and even from other PCs on your
network. In other words, a library doesn’t really contain anything at all. It simply
monitors other folders, and provides a single “place” to work with all their contents.
Windows 7 starts you out with four libraries: Documents, Music, Pictures, and Videos.
Sure, XP and Vista came with folders bearing those names, but libraries are much
more powerful. (You can make libraries of your own, too.)
The Pictures library, for example, seems to contain all your photos—but in real life,
they may be scattered all over your hard drive, on external drives, or on other PCs
in the house.
So what’s the point? Well, consider the advantages over regular folders:
•• Everything’s in one spot. When it comes time to put together a year-end photo
album, for example, you might be very grateful to find your pictures, your spouse’s
pictures from the upstairs PC, and the pictures from your kid’s laptop all in one
central place, ready for choosing. Figure 2-14 shows the idea.
•• Happy laptop reunions. When you come home with your laptop and connect to
the network, you’re instantly reunited with all those music, pictures, and video
files you store on other drives.
•• Easy backup or transfer. You can back up or transfer all the files corresponding
to a certain project or time period in one fell swoop, even though the originals
are in a bunch of different places or reside on different collaborators’ computers.
•• Manipulate en masse. You can work with the contents of a library—slicing, dicing,
searching, organizing, filtering—just as you would a folder’s contents. But because
you’re actually working with folders from all over your computer and even your
network, you can be far more efficient.

Working with Library Contents
To use a library, click its name in your Navigation pane. (Try Pictures, for example.)
A few clues tell you that you’re not in a regular folder. First, there’s the huge banner
at the top of the window that says “Pictures library” or whatever (Figure 2-14). The

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Libraries

subheading, “Includes: 2 locations,” lets you know that you’re actually looking at the
consolidated contents of two folders.
The other giveaway is the “Arrange by:” pop-up menu. This awesome tool lets you sort
the window contents according to useful criteria. For Pictures, you can sort by Folder,
Month, Day, Rating, or Tag. For Music, it’s Album, Artist, Song, Genre, and Rating.
For Documents, it’s Author, Date Modified, Tag, Type, or Name. You get the idea.

Actually sitting on
an external hard drive

Figure 2-14:
The Pictures library
window seems to
contain a bunch of
photo folders, all in
one place. As a bonus, you can access
all this from within
the Save and Open
dialog boxes within
your programs, too.
But don’t be fooled;
in real life, these
folders are scattered
all over your system.

When you choose one of these Arrange commands, the icons in the library window
clump together by type, like kids in a high-school cafeteria (Figure 2-15).
You can also filter a library window—that is, to hide all the files that don’t meet certain
criteria. You can show only the photos taken last year, only the songs recorded by The
frequently asked question

Your Preferred “Save Into” Folder
So let me get this straight: A library is just a fiction. It contains
links to a bunch of folders. So when I’m in, say, Microsoft
Word, and I save a new document “into the library,” which
real folder am I saving it into?
That’s up to you.

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In an Explorer window, click the library in question. Where it
says “Includes:” at the top of the window, click “locations.”
In the Library Locations dialog box (shown in Figure 2-16),
right-click the folder you want to be the standard location for
new files you save into this library. From the shortcut menu,
choose “Set as default save location,” and then click OK.

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Beatles, only documents written by your partner, and so on. Page 82 has more on
filtering, but the point here is that you’re now performing this action on files that have
been rounded up from all over your system and your network—at once.

Libraries

Tip: Remember, the icons in a library aren’t really there; they’re just a mirage. They’re stunt doubles for files
that actually sit in other folders on your hard drive.
Fortunately, when you’re getting a bit confused as to what’s really where, there’s a way to jump to a file or
folder’s actual location. Right-click its icon in the library; from the shortcut menu, choose “Open file location”
(or “Open folder location”). You jump right to the real thing, sitting in its actual Windows Explorer window.

Figure 2-15:
Top: The “Arrange
by” pop-up menu
does more than
just sort things. It
actually groups
things. Here, when
sorted by rating,
Windows identifies
each group of
photos with its
own headline,
making the
window look like
an index. It’s an
inspired tool that
makes it easier to
hunt down specific
icons among the
haystack of thousands.
Bottom: When
you’re using “Arrange by” for your
music, commands
like Genre and
Artist produce
pseudo-folders—
artificial holding
tanks for all the
music in that style
or by that band.

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Libraries

Adding a Folder to an Existing Library
A library is nothing without a bunch of folders to feed into it. You can add a folder to a
library (like Pictures or Music) in any of four ways, depending on where you’re starting.
•• You can see the folder’s icon. If the folder is on the desktop or in a window, rightclick it. From the shortcut menu, choose “Include in library”; the submenu lists
all your existing libraries so you can choose the one you want. Figure 2-16 shows
the idea.
Figure 2-16:
The path to adding
a folder to a library
may begin with the
folder itself (left), the
open window of the
folder (bottom), or
the library (right).

•• You can see the folder’s icon (alternate). Use the right mouse button to drag the
folder onto a library’s name in the Navigation pane. Release the mouse button
when it’s on the library name. From the shortcut menu, choose “Include in library.”
•• You’ve opened the folder’s window. This one’s even easier. On the toolbar of every
folder window, there’s a big fat “Include in library” menu staring you in the face.
Use it to choose the library you want this folder to join.
•• You’ve opened the library window. If you’re already in the library, then where it
says “Includes:” click where it says “3 locations” (or whatever the number is). You
get the “Change how this library gathers its contents” dialog box, shown in Figure
2-16. Click Add, and then find and double-click the folder you want. You see it
added to the “Library locations” list in the dialog box. Click OK.
The fine print
All the techniques above also work for folders on external drives, USB flash drives,
and shared folders on your network. There is, however, some important fine print:
•• You can’t add a folder that’s on a CD or a DVD.

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•• You can add a folder that’s on a USB flash drive, as long as that flash drive’s icon
shows up in the Navigation pane when it’s inserted, under the Computer/Hard
Drives heading. (A few oddball models appear under Devices With Removable
Storage; they’re not allowed.) Furthermore, the folder won’t be available in the
library when the flash drive isn’t inserted (duh).

Libraries

•• You can’t add a networked folder to a library unless it’s been indexed for searching on
the PC that contains it; see page 134 for details on that process. (If it’s a Windows 7
machine that’s part of a homegroup [page 321], you’re all set; it’s been indexed.)
As an alternative, you can turn on the “available offline” feature for that networked
folder, as described on page 636. The good news is that the folder can now be part of
your library even when the other PC on the network is turned off. The bad news is
that you’ve basically copied that folder to your own PC, which eats up a lot of disk
space and sort of defeats the purpose of adding a networked folder to your library.

Removing a Folder from a Library
Getting rid of a folder is pretty straightforward, really. You can use any of these
techniques:
•• If the library window is open: Where it says “Includes:” click where it says “3 locations” (or whatever the number is). You get the “Change how this library gathers its
contents” dialog box, shown in Figure 2-16. Click the folder you want to remove,
click Remove, and click OK.
•• If the library’s name is visible in the Navigation pane: Expand the library to show
the folder you want to remove. Right-click the folder’s name. From the shortcut
menu, choose “Remove location from library.”
Remember: You’re not deleting anything important. A library only pretends to contain
other folders; the real ones are actually sitting in other places on your PC or network,
even after the library is gone.

Creating a New Library
The starter libraries (Pictures, Music, Documents, and Videos) are awfully useful
right out of the box. Truth is, they’re as far as most people probably go with the
libraries feature.
But you may have good reasons to create new ones. Maybe you want to create a library
for each client—and fill it with the corresponding project folders, some of which have
been archived away on external drives. Maybe you want to round up folders full of
fonts, clip art, and text, in readiness for submitting a graphics project to a print shop.
In any case, here are the different ways to go about it:
•• From the Navigation pane. Click the Libraries heading in the navigation pane,
and then click “New library” in the toolbar. (Alternate method: Right-click the
word “Library” in any window’s Navigation pane. From the shortcut menu, choose
NewÆLibrary.)

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Libraries

A new, empty library appears, both in the Libraries window and in the list of
libraries in the Nav pane. It’s up to you to add folders to it, as described earlier.
•• From a folder. Right-click any folder. From the shortcut menu, choose “Include
in library”Æ”Create new library.” Bing! A new library appears in the Libraries list,
named after the folder you clicked. As a handy bonus, this library already contains
its first folder: the one you clicked, of course.
Tip: Once you’ve created a library, you can specify which canned library style it resembles most: General
Items, Pictures, Music, Documents, or Videos. (Why does it matter? Because the library style determines
which commands are available in the “Arrange by” pop-up menu. Pictures offer choices like Month and Day;
Music offers choices like Rating and Genre.
Anyway, to make this choice, right-click the library’s name in the Navigation pane of an Explorer window.
From the shortcut menu, choose Properties. In the “Optimize this library for” list, click the type you want,
and then click OK.

Tags, Metadata, and Properties
All Versions

See all that information in the Details pane—Date, Size, Title, and so on? It’s known
by geeks as metadata (Greek for “data about data”). (Drag the upper border of the
Details pane upward to reveal more of this information.)
Different kinds of files provide different sorts of details. For a document, for example,
you might see Authors, Comments, Title, Categories, Status, and so on. For an MP3
music file, you get Artists, Albums, Genre, Year, and so on. For a photo, you get Date
Taken, Title, Author, and so on.
Oddly (and usefully) enough, you can actually edit some of this stuff (Figure 2-17).
power users' clinic

Hiding and Showing Libraries
Microsoft thinks libraries are very important. After all, libraries
get one of the coveted spots in the Navigation pane at the
left side of every single Explorer window.
You, however, may not consider all of them equally important. You might not use your PC for music at all. You might
not have any videos.
Or maybe you love libraries, but you don’t want all of them
listed in the Nav pane, either for privacy reasons or clutter
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In each of these cases, it’s nice to know you can hide a
library so that its name doesn’t appear in the Nav pane.
Just right-click the library’s name; from the shortcut menu,
choose “Don’t show in navigation pane.” Poof! It’s gone (just
the listing, not the library itself).
You can, fortunately, bring the library listing back. It’s still
sitting in your Personal folderÆLibraries folder. To see it,
click the word Libraries in any window’s Navigation pane.
Right-click the library’s icon; from the shortcut menu, choose
“Show in navigation pane.” Foop! It’s back in the list.

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Some of the metadata is off limits. For example, you can’t edit the Date Created or
Date Modified info. (Sorry, defense attorneys of the world.) But you can edit the star
ratings for music or pictures; in the row of five stars, click the rating star you want.
Click the third star to give a song a 3, for example.

Tags, Metadata,
and Properties

Figure 2-17:
Click the information
you want to change;
if a text-editing box
appears, you’ve hit
pay dirt. Type away,
and then press Enter
(or click the Save button at the lower-right
corner of the dialog
box). To input a list
(of tags or authors,
for example), type a
semicolon (;) after
each one.

Most usefully of all, you can edit the Tags box for almost any kind of icon. A tag is
just a keyword. It can be anything you want: McDuffy Proposal, Old Junk, Back Me
Up—anything. Later, you’ll be able to round up everything on your computer with
a certain tag, all in a single window, even though they physically reside in different
folders.
You’ll encounter tags in plenty of other places in Windows—and in this book, especially when it comes to searching for photos and music.
Note: Weirdly, you can’t add tags or ratings to BMP, PNG, AVI, or MPG files.

Many of the boxes here offer autocompletion, meaning that Windows proposes
finishing a name or text tidbit for you if it recognizes what you’ve started to type.
Tip: You can tag a bunch of icons at once. Just highlight them all (page 150) and then change the corresponding
detail in the Details pane once. This is a great trick for applying a tag or star rating to a mass of files quickly.

Click Save when you’re finished.

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Tags, Metadata,
and Properties

Properties
The Details pane shows some of the most important details about a file, but if you
really want to see the entire metadata dossier for an icon, open its Properties dialog
box using one of these tactics:
•• Right-click it. From the shortcut menu, choose Properties.
•• Alt+double-click it.
•• If the icon is already highlighted, press Alt+Enter.
In each case, the Properties dialog box appears. It’s a lot like the one in previous
versions of Windows, in that it displays the file’s name, location, size, and so on. But
in Windows 7, it also bears a scrolling Details tab that’s sometimes teeming with
metadata details (Figure 2-18).
Figure 2-18:
If Windows knows anything about an icon, it’s in
here. Scroll, scroll, and scroll some more to find the
tidbit you want to see—or to edit. As with the Details
pane, many of these text morsels are editable.

Icon and List Views
All Versions

Windows’s windows look just fine straight from the factory; the edges are straight,
and the text is perfectly legible. Still, if you’re going to stare at this screen for half of
your waking hours, you may as well investigate some of the ways these windows can
be enhanced.

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For starters, you can view the files and folders in an Explorer window in either of two
ways: as icons (of any size) or as a list (in several formats). Figure 2-19 shows some
of your options.

Icon and List Views

Figure 2-19:
The Views pop-up menu
is a little weird; it actually
has two columns. At right,
it displays the preset view
options for the files and
folders in a window. At left,
a slider adjusts icon sizes
to any degree of scaling—at
least until it reaches the
bottom part of its track.
In any case, here’s a survey
of the window views in
Windows 7: Medium Icons,
Content view, List view,
and Details view. List and
Details views are great
for windows with lots of
files. Extra Large Icons (not
shown) is great if you’re 30
feet away.

gem in the rough

How to Shed Your Metadata’s Skin
At the bottom of the Details pane (of the Properties dialog
box) is a peculiarly worded link: “Remove Properties and
Personal Information.”
This is a privacy feature. What it means is, “Clean away all
the metadata I’ve added myself, like author names, tag
keywords, and other insights into my own work routine.”
Microsoft’s thinking here is that you might not want other
people who encounter this document (as an email attachment, for example) to have such a sweeping insight into the
minutiae of your own work routine.
When you click this link, the Remove Properties dialog box
appears, offering you a scrolling list of checkboxes: Title,
Rating, Tags, Comments, and lots and lots of others.

You can proceed in either of two ways. If you turn on “Create a copy with all possible properties removed,” then all
the metadata that’s possible to erase (everything but things
like file type, name, and so on) will be stripped away. When
you click OK, Windows instantly creates a duplicate of the
file (with the word “Copy” tacked onto its name), ready for
distribution to the masses in its clean form. The original is
left untouched.
If you choose “Remove the following properties from this
file” instead, you can specify exactly which file details you
want erased from the original. (Turn on the appropriate
checkboxes.)

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Icon and List Views

Every window remembers its view settings independently. You might prefer to look
over your Documents folder in List view (because it’s crammed with files and folders),
but you may prefer to view the Pictures library in Icon view, where the icons look like
miniatures of the actual photos.
To switch a window from one view to another, you have three options, all of which
involve the Views pop-up menu shown in Figure 2-19:
•• Click the Views button. With each click, the window switches to the next view in
this sequence: List, Details, Tiles, Content, Large Icons.
•• Use the Views pop-up menu. If you click the ≥ triangle next to the word “Views,”
the menu opens, listing Extra Large Icons, Large Icons, Small Icons, List, and so
on. Choose the option you want. (They’re described below.)
•• Use the slider. The Views menu, once opened, also contains a strange little slider
down the left side. It’s designed to let Windows’s graphics software show off a
little. The slider makes the icons shrink or grow freely, to sizes that fall between
the canned Extra Large, Large, Medium, and Small choices.
What’s so strange is that partway down its track, the slider stops adjusting icon
sizes and turns into a selector switch for the last four options in the menu: List,
Details, Tiles, and Content.
Tip: You can enlarge or shrink all the icons in a window, quick as a wink, by turning your mouse’s scroll
wheel while you press the Ctrl key. This trick even works on desktop icons.
(If you didn’t have that trick, the only way to adjust icon sizes on the desktop would be to right-click a blank
spot and choose from the View command in the shortcut menu.)

So what are these various views? And when should you use which? Here you go:
•• Icon view. In an icon view, every file, folder, and disk is represented by a small picture—an icon. This humble image, a visual representation of electronic bits, is the
cornerstone of the entire Windows religion. (Maybe that’s why it’s called an icon.)
Interestingly, in Windows 7, folder icons appear turned 90 degrees. Now, in real
life, setting filing folders onto a desk that way would be idiotic; everything inside
would tumble out. But in Windows-land, the icons within a folder remain exactly
where they are. Better yet, at larger icon sizes, they peek out just enough so that
you can see them. In the Music folder, for example, a singer’s folder shows the
first album cover within; a folder full of PowerPoint presentations shows the first
slide or two; and so on.
Tip: If you have a multitouch screen, you can use the two-finger spreading gesture to enlarge icons, or the
pinching gesture to shrink them, right on the glass.

•• List view. This one packs, by far, the most files into the space of a window; each file
has a tiny icon to its left, and the list of files wraps around into as many columns
as necessary to maximize the window’s available space.
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•• Details view. This is the same as List view, except that it presents only a single
column of files. It’s a table, really; additional columns reveal the size, icon type,
modification date, rating, and other information.

Icon and List Views

•• Tiles view. Your icons appear at standard size, with name and file details just to
the right.
•• Content view. This view, new in Windows 7, attempts to cram as many details
about each file as will fit in your window (Figure 2-20). Yes, that’s right: It’s a table
that shows not just a file’s icon and name, but also its metadata (Properties) and,
in the case of text and Word files, even the first couple of lines of text inside it. (If
power users' clinic

Secrets of the Details View Columns
In windows that contain a lot of icons, Details view is a
powerful weapon in the battle against chaos. Better yet,
you get to decide how wide the columns should be, which
of them should appear, and in what order. Here are the
details on Details:
Add or remove columns.
Right-click any column heading (like Name or Size). When
the shortcut menu opens,
checkmarks appear next to the
visible columns: Name, Date
Modified, Size, and so on.
Choose a column’s name to
make it appear or disappear.
But don’t think that you’re stuck
with that handful of common
columns. If you click More in
the shortcut menu, you open
the Choose Details dialog box,
which lists over 200 more
column types, most of which are useful only in certain circumstances: Album Artist (for music files), Copyright, Date
Taken, Exposure Time (for photos), Nickname (for people),
Video Compression (for movies), and on and on. To make
one of these columns appear, turn on its checkbox and then
click OK; by the time you’re done, your Explorer window can
look like a veritable spreadsheet of information.

Rearrange the columns. You can rearrange your Details
columns just by dragging their gray column headers
horizontally. (You can even drag the Name column out of
first position.) As you drag, a tiny bold divider line in the
column-heading area snaps into place to show where it
thinks you intend to drop the
column you’re dragging.
Change column widths. If
some text in a column is too
long to fit, Windows displays
an ellipsis (…) after the first
few letters of each word. In
that case, here’s a great trick:
Carefully position your cursor
at the right edge of the column’s header (Name, Size, or
whatever—even to the right of
the ≥ button). When the cursor sprouts horizontal arrows
from each side, double-click
the divider line to make the
column adjust itself, fitting automatically to accommodate
the longest item in the column.
If you’d rather adjust the column width manually, then
instead of double-clicking the dividing line between two
column headings, just drag horizontally. Doing so makes
the column to the left of your cursor wider or narrower.

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Sorting, Grouping,
and Filtering

you’re not seeing all the file details you think you should, make the window bigger.
Windows adds and subtracts columns of information as needed to fit.)
You’ll get to know Content view very well indeed once you start using Windows 7’s
Search feature, which uses this view to display your results when you search in an
Explorer window.
Figure 2-20:
Content view is especially useful when you’re
viewing search results,
because the snippet of
text revealed beneath
each icon shows, with
highlighting, the portion
of text that matched your
search query. Context is
everything, dude.

Sorting, Grouping, and Filtering
All Versions

In Windows 7, sorting is only one way to impose order on your teeming icons. Grouping and filtering can be handy, too.
Note: In Windows Vista, there was actually a lot more of this stuff. There was a whole row of criteria buttons (Name, Size, Date…) across the top of every Explorer window—yes, another toolbar-like thing—that
existed solely to help you sort, group, and filter. To make matters worse, Windows Vista offered still another
organizational feature called stacking.
In the end, this was just too much; people’s eyes glazed over. Today, the strip of sorting criteria lives on
only in Details view, which is by far the best view for grouping and sorting. If you want to sort or group the
contents of a window in any other view, you have to right-click, as described below.

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Sorting Files
Sorting the files in a window alphabetically or chronologically is nice, but it’s so
2005. In Windows 7, you can sort up, down, and sideways. The technique for doing
so depends on which window view you’re in.

Sorting, Grouping,
and Filtering

Details view
In Details view, sorting is simple. See the column headings, like Name, Size, and Type?
They aren’t just signposts; they’re also buttons. Click Name for alphabetical order,
“Date modified” for chronological order, Size to view largest files at the top, and so
on (Figure 2-21).
Figure 2-21:
Top: You control the
sorting order of a List
view by clicking the
column headings.
Bottom: Click a second
time to reverse the
sorting order.
The tiny triangle is
a reminder. It shows
you which way you’ve
sorted the window: in
ascending order (for
example, A to Z) or
descending order (Z
to A).

It’s especially important to note the tiny ≤ or ≥ just above the heading you’ve most
recently clicked. It shows you which way the list is being sorted. When the triangle
points upward, oldest files, smallest files, or files whose names begin with numbers
(or the letter A) appear at the top of the list, depending on which sorting criterion
you’ve selected.
Tip: It may help you to remember that when the smallest portion of the triangle is at the top, the smallest
files are listed first when viewed in size order.

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Sorting, Grouping,
and Filtering

To reverse the sorting order, just click the column heading a second time. The tiny
triangle turns upside-down.
Note: Within each window, Windows groups folders separately from files. They get sorted, too, but within
their own little folder ghetto.

All other views
You can sort your icons in the other window views, too, but it’s a lot more work. For
one thing, you have to know the secret: Right-click a blank spot in the window. From
the shortcut menu, choose “Sort by” and choose the criterion you want (Name, Date,
Type…) from the submenu.
There’s no handy triangle to tell you which way you’ve just sorted things; is it oldest to
newest or newest to oldest? To make that decision, you have to right-click the window
a second time; this time, from the “Sort by” submenu, choose either Ascending or
Descending.
Figure 2-22:
To group the
icons in a
window, rightclick a blank
spot. From the
shortcut menu,
choose “Group
by,” and then
choose the
criterion you
want to use
for grouping,
like Name,
Date, Size, or
whatever.

Grouping
Grouping means “adding headings within the window and clustering the icons beneath
the headings.” The effect is shown in Figure 2-22, and so is the procedure. Try it out;
grouping can be a great way to wrangle some order from a seething mass of icons.

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Tip: Don’t forget that you can flip the sorting order of your groups. Reopen that shortcut menu and the
“Group by” submenu, and specify Ascending or Descending.

Sorting, Grouping,
and Filtering

Filtering
Filtering, a feature available only in Details view, means hiding. When you turn on
filtering, a bunch of the icons in a window disappear, which can make filtering a sore
subject for novices.
Tip: In case you one day think you’ve lost a bunch of important files, look for the checkmark next to a column
heading, as shown in Figure 2-23. That’s your clue that filtering is turned on, and Windows is deliberately
hiding something from you.

On the positive side, filtering means screening out stuff you don’t care about. When
you’re looking for a document you know you worked on last week, you can tell Windows to show you only the documents edited last week.
Figure 2-23:
You can turn on
more than one
checkbox. To see
music by The
Beatles or U2, turn
on both checkboxes. In fact, you can
turn on checkboxes
from more than
one heading—music
by The Beatles or
U2, rated four stars
or higher.

You turn on filtering by opening the pop-up menu next to the column heading you
want. For instance, if you want to see only your five-star photos in the Pictures folder,
open the Rating pop-up menu.
Sometimes, you’ll see a whole long list of checkboxes in one of these pop-up menus
(Figure 2-23). For example, if you want to see only the songs in your Music folder by
The Beatles, turn on the Beatles checkmark.
Note: Filtering, by the way, can be turned on with sorting or grouping.

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Uni-Window vs.
Multi-Window

Once you’ve filtered a window in Details view, you can switch to a different view; you’ll
still see (and not see) the same set of icons. The address bar reminds you that you’ve
turned on filtering; it might say, for example, “Research notesÆLongTimeAgoÆDOC
file,” meaning “ancient Word files.”
To stop filtering, open the heading pop-up menu again and turn off the Filter checkbox.
Note: The other window views offer a Search box in the upper right. Keep in mind that you can do quickand-dirty filtering using that box, too, as described on page 125. It’s not the same checkbox mechanism, but
the results are pretty much the same.

Uni-Window vs. Multi-Window
All Versions

When you double-click a folder, Windows can react in one of two ways:
•• It can open a new window. Now you’ve got two windows on the screen, one overlapping the other. Moving or copying an icon from one into the other is a piece
of cake. Trouble is, if your double-clicking craze continues much longer, your
screen will eventually be overrun with windows, which you must now painstakingly close again.
power users' clinic

The Little Filtering Calendar
Some of the column-heading pop-up menus in Details
view—Date modified, Date created, Date taken, and so
on—display a little calendar, right there in the menu. You’re
supposed to use it to specify a date or date range. You use
it, for example, if you want to see only the photos taken
last August, or the Word documents
created last week. Here’s how the little
calendar works:
To change the month, click the ¯ or
˘ buttons to go one month at a time.
Or click the month name to see a list of
all 12 months; click the one you want.
To change the year, click the ¯ or ˘
buttons. Or, to jump farther back or
forward, double-click the month’s name. You’re offered a
list of all 10 years in this decade. Click a third time (on the
decade heading) to see a list of decades. At this point, drill
down to the year you want by clicking what you want. (The

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calendar goes from 1601 to the year 9999, which should
pretty much cover your digital photo collection.)
To see only the photos taken on a certain date, click the
appropriate date on the month-view calendar.
To add photos taken on other dates,
click additional squares. You can also
drag horizontally, vertically, or diagonally
to select blocks of consecutive dates.
If you “back out” until you’re viewing
the names of months, years, or decades,
you can click or drag to choose, for
example, only the photos taken in June
or July 2010.
The checkboxes below the calendar offer one-click access to
photos taken earlier this week, earlier this year, and before
the beginning of this year (“a long time ago”).

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•• It can replace the original window with a new one. This only-one-window-atall-times behavior keeps your desktop from becoming crowded with windows.
If you need to return to the previous window, the Back button takes you there.
Of course, you’ll have a harder time dragging icons from one window to another
using this method.

Immortalizing Your
Tweaks

Whatever you decide, you switch windows between these two behaviors like this: In
an Explorer window, choose OrganizeÆ“Folder and search options.” In the resulting
dialog box, click “Open each folder in the same window” or “Open each folder in its
own window,” as you like. Then click OK.

Immortalizing Your Tweaks
All Versions

Once you’ve twiddled and tweaked an Explorer window into a perfectly efficient
configuration of columns and views, you needn’t go through the same exercises for
each folder. Windows can immortalize your changes as the standard setting for all
your windows.
Choose OrganizeÆ“Folder and search options”; click the View tab. Click “Apply to
Folders,” and confirm your decision by clicking Yes.
At this point, all your disk and folder windows open up with the same view, sorting
method, and so on. You’re still free to override those standard settings on a windowby-window basis, however. (And if you change your mind again and want to make all
your maverick folder windows snap back to the standard settings, repeat the process,
but click Reset Folders instead.)

The “Folder Options” Options
All Versions

In the battle between flexibility and simplicity, Microsoft comes down on the side of
flexibility almost every time. Anywhere it can provide you with more options, it will.
Explorer windows are a case in point, as the following pages of sometimes preposterously tweaky options make clear. The good news: If Explorer windows already work
fine for you the way they are, you can ignore all of this.
But if you’d like to visit the famed Folder Options dialog box, here are a few ways to
get there:
•• Choose OrganizeÆ“Folder and search options” from any Explorer window.
•• Press the Alt key to make the old menu bar appear. Choose ToolsÆ“Folder options.”
•• Open the Start menu. Start typing the word folder until you see Folder Options
in the results list; click it.
•• In the Control Panel, type folder into the Search box. Click Folder Options.
In each case, click the View tab to see the dialog box shown in Figure 2-24.
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The “Folder
Options” Options

Here you see an array of options that affect all the folder windows on your PC. When
assessing the impact of these controls, earth-shattering isn’t the adjective that springs
to mind. Still, you may find one or two of them useful.
Figure 2-24:
Some of the options in this list are contained
within tiny folder icons. A double-click collapses
(hides) these folder options or shows them
again. For example, you can hide the “Do
not show hidden files and folders” option by
collapsing the “Hidden files and folders” folder
icon.

Here are the functions of the various checkboxes:
•• Always show icons, never thumbnails. Windows takes great pride in displaying
your document icons as documents. That is, each icon appears as a miniature of
the document itself—a feature that’s especially useful in folders full of photos.
On a slowish PC, this feature can make your processor gasp for breath. If you notice that the icons are taking forever to appear, consider turning this checkbox on.
•• Always show menus. This checkbox forces the traditional Windows menu bar
(File, Edit, View, and so on) to appear in every Explorer window, without your
having to tap the Alt key.
•• Display file icon on thumbnails. Ordinarily, you can identify documents (think
Word, Excel, PowerPoint) because their icons display the corresponding logo (a
big W for Word, and so on). But in Windows’s icon views (Medium and larger),
you see the actual document on the icon—an image of the document’s first page.
So does that mean you can no longer tell at a glance what kind of document it is?

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Don’t be silly. This option superimposes, on each thumbnail icon, a tiny “badge,”
a sub-icon, that identifies what kind of file it is. (It works on only some kinds of
documents, however.)

The “Folder
Options” Options

•• Display file size information in folder tips. A folder tip is a rectangular balloon that
appears when you point to a folder—a little yellow box that tells you what’s in that
folder and how big it is on the disk. (It appears only if you’ve turned on the “Show
pop-up description” checkbox described below.) You turn off this checkbox if you
want to see only the description, but not the size. Talk about tweaky!
Note: It’s at this spot in the list where, in pre-Win7 versions, you used to find the “Display simple folder view”
option. It added vertical dotted lines to designate each level of folder indenting in the Navigation pane, as
in older versions of Windows. But simple folder view is no longer with us in Windows 7. Time marches on.

•• Display the full path in the title bar (Classic theme only). Suppose you’ve rejected
the millions of dollars Microsoft put into Windows’s new look. You’ve opted instead for the clunky old Classic theme (page 176). In that case, when this option
is on, Windows reveals the exact location of the current window in the title bar
of the window—for example, C:\Users\Chris\Documents. See page 58 for more
on folder paths. Seeing the path can be useful when you’re not sure which disk a
folder is on, for example.
•• Hidden files and folders. Microsoft grew weary of answering tech-support calls
from clueless or mischievous customers who had moved or deleted critical system
files, rendering their PCs crippled or useless. The company concluded that the
simplest preventive measure would be to make them invisible (the files, not the
customers).
This checkbox is responsible. Your personal and Windows folders, among other
places, house several invisible folders and files that the average person isn’t meant
to fool around with. Big Brother is watching you, but he means well.
By selecting “Show hidden files, folders, and drives,” you, the confident power
user in times of troubleshooting or customization, can make the hidden files and
folders appear (they show up with dimmed icons, as though to reinforce their
delicate nature). But you’ll have the smoothest possible computing career if you
leave these options untouched.
•• Hide empty drives in the Computer folder. For years, the Computer window has
displayed icons for your removable-disk drives (floppy, CD, DVD, memory-card
slots, whatever) even if nothing was in them. In Windows 7, though, that’s changed.
Now you see icons only when you insert a disk into these drives. (It now works like
the Mac, if that’s any help.)
•• Hide extensions for known file types. Windows normally hides the filename
extension on standard files and documents (.doc, .jpg, and so on), in an effort to
make Windows seem less technical and intimidating. Your files wind up named
“Groceries” and “Frank” instead of “Groceries.doc” and “Frank.jpg.”

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The “Folder
Options” Options

There are some excellent reasons, though, why you should turn off this option. See
page 242 for more on this topic.
•• Hide protected operating system files. This option is similar to “Show hidden files
and folders,” above—except that it refers to even more important files, system files
that may not be invisible, but are nonetheless so important that moving or deleting
them might turn your PC into a $2,000 paperweight. Turning this off, in fact, produces a warning message that’s meant to frighten away everybody but power geeks.
•• Launch folder windows in a separate process. This geekily worded setting opens
each folder into a different chunk of memory (RAM). In certain rare situations,
this largely obsolete arrangement is more stable—but it slows down your machine
slightly and unnecessarily uses memory.
•• Restore previous folder windows at logon. Every time you log off the computer,
Windows forgets which windows were open. That’s a distinct bummer, especially
if you tend to work out of your Documents window, which you must therefore
manually reopen every time you fire up the old PC.
If you turn on this useful checkbox, then Windows will automatically greet you
with whichever windows were open when you last logged off.
•• Show drive letters. Turn off this checkbox to hide the drive letters that identify each
of your disk drives in the Computer window (StartÆComputer). In other words,
“Local Disk (C:)” becomes “Local Disk”—an option that might make newcomers
feel less intimidated.
•• Show encrypted or compressed NTFS files in color. This option won’t make much
sense until you’ve read pages 163 and 675, which explain how Windows can encode
and compact your files for better security and disk space use. It turns the names of
affected icons green and blue, respectively, so you can spot them at a glance. On
the other hand, encrypted or compressed files and folders operate quite normally,
immediately converting back to human form when double-clicked; hence, knowing which ones have been affected isn’t particularly valuable. Turn off this box to
make them look just like any other files and folders.
•• Show pop-up description for folder and desktop icons. If you point to an icon,
a taskbar button, a found item in Search, or whatever (without clicking), you get
a tooltip—a floating, colored label that identifies what you’re pointing to. If you
find tooltips distracting, turn off this checkbox.
•• Show preview handlers in preview pane. This is the on/off switch for one of Windows’s best features: seeing a preview of a selected document icon in the Preview
pane. Turn it off only if your PC is grinding to a halt under the strain of all this
graphics-intensive goodness.
•• Use check boxes to select items. Now here’s a weird one: This option makes a
checkbox appear on every icon you point to with your mouse, for ease in selection.
Page 151 explains all.

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Tip: This option replaces the “Single-click to open an item” option of Windows XP.

The “Folder
Options” Options

•• Use Sharing Wizard (Recommended). Sharing files with other computers is one of
the great perks of having a network. As Chapter 26 makes clear, this feature makes
it much easier to understand what you’re doing. For example, it lets you specify
that only certain people are allowed to access your files, and lets you decide how
much access they have. (For example, can they change them or just see them?)
•• When typing into list view. When you’ve got an Explorer window open, teeming
with a list of files, what do you want to happen when you start typing?
In the olden days, that’d be an easy one: “Highlight an icon, of course!” That is, if
you type piz, you highlight the file called Pizza with Casey.jpg. And indeed, that’s
what the factory setting means: “Select the typed item within the view.”
But Windows 7 has a Search box in every Explorer window. If you turn on “Automatically type into the Search Box,” then each letter you type arrives in that box,
performing a real-time, letter-by-letter search of all the icons in the window. Your
savings: one mouse click.

Taskbar 2.0
All Versions

For years, the taskbar—the strip of colorful icons at the bottom of your screen—has
been one of the most prominent and important elements of the Windows interface
(Figure 2-25). In Windows 7, you can call it Taskbar, Extreme Makeover Edition,
because it does a lot of things it’s never done before.
Figure 2-25:
On the left is the
Start menu. In
the middle are
buttons for every
program you’re
running—and
every program
you’ve pinned
there for easy
access later. .

Thumbnails (point without clicking)

Program buttons (some running, some not)

Notification Area

Here’s an introduction to its functions, old and new:
•• The Start menu is at the left end. As you’ll soon see, the Start menu and taskbar
are related in all kinds of ways.
•• The taskbar lists your open programs and windows. The icons on the taskbar make
it easy to switch from one open program to another—from your Web browser
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Taskbar 2.0

to your email programs, for example—or even to specific windows within those
programs.
•• The taskbar lets you open your favorite programs. If you just splurted your Sprite,
you’re forgiven; this is a new task for the taskbar, a Windows 7 special. The taskbar
is now a launcher, just like the taskbar in Mac OS X or the QuickLaunch toolbar
in old Windows versions.
•• The system tray (notification area) is at the right end. These tiny icons show you
the status of your network connection, battery life, and so on.
•• The Show Desktop button huddles at the far right end. You can read more about
this weird rectangular sliver on page 67.
You’ve already read about the Start menu; the following pages cover the taskbar’s
other functions.
Tip: You can operate the taskbar entirely from the keyboard. Press w+T to highlight the first button on it,
as indicated by a subtle glow. Then you can “walk” across its buttons by pressing the left/right arrow keys, or
by pressing w+T (add the Shift key to “walk” in the opposite direction). Once a button is highlighted, you
can tap the space bar to “click” it, press Shift+F10 to “right-click” it, or press the Menu key on your keyboard
to open the icon’s jump list. Who needs a mouse anymore?

Taskbar as App Switcher
Every open window is represented by a button—in Aero, it’s an actual miniature of
the window itself—that sprouts from its program’s taskbar icon. These buttons make
it easy to switch between open programs and windows. Just click one to bring its
associated window into the foreground, even if it has been minimized.
troubleshooting moment

No Thumbnails? No Previews? No Aero.
If your taskbar isn’t offering up the goodies you’re reading
about here—pop-up thumbnails of your open windows,
full-size window previews—then you must not have Aero
working for you (page 23).
That could be because your computer is so feeble that it can’t
run Aero at all, as described on page 25. It could mean that
your computer has Windows 7 Starter edition. Or it could
mean that you’ve selected a cosmetic theme that comes
with Aero turned off. (In that case, the problem is easy to
fix. Right-click a blank spot on the desktop. From the shortcut
menu, choose Personalize. In the resulting window, click
one of the icons listed under Aero Themes. They offer the

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Aero desktop features described in this book, whereas the
Basic themes do not. (See Chapter 4 for more on themes.)
All right, but what if Aero is turned off and you can’t, or don’t
want to, turn it on? The taskbar can still be useful to you!
In that case, clicking a taskbar thumbnail does not produce
a miniature of its windows—instead, it produces a list of their
names, which may not be as pretty but is often just as useful.
Also in that case, pointing to a thumbnail without clicking
doesn’t give a full-size window preview—but you’re not out
of luck. You can still enjoy full-size window previews—by
Ctrl+clicking a taskbar icon. With each Ctrl+click, Windows
shows you another open window in that program.

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Handy Window Miniatures

Taskbar 2.0

On PCs with Aero (page 23), the taskbar does more than display each window’s name.
If you point to a program’s button without clicking, it sprouts thumbnail images of
the windows themselves. Figure 2-26 shows the effect. It’s a lot more informative than
just reading the windows’ names, as in days of yore (your previous Windows versions,
that is). The thumbnails are especially good at helping you spot a particular Web page,
photo, or PDF document.
Tip: There’s a tiny Close button (X) in each thumbnail, too, which makes it easy to close a window without
having to bring it forward first. (Or click the thumbnail itself with your mouse’s scroll wheel, or use your
middle mouse button, if you have one.) Each thumbnail also has a hidden shortcut menu. Right-click to
see your options!

Aero Peek
Those window miniatures are old news, at least if you’ve used Windows Vista. What’s
cool in Windows 7 is the full-screen previews of your windows.
To see them, point to one of the thumbnails without clicking. As you can see in Figure
2-26 (bottom), Windows now displays that window at full size, right on the screen,
even if it was minimized, buried, or hidden. Keep moving your cursor across the
thumbnails (if there are more than one); each time the pointer lands on a thumbnail,
the full-size window preview changes to show what’s in it.
When you find the window you want, click on the thumbnail you’re already pointing
to. The window pops open so you can work in it.
Figure 2-26:
Pointing to a taskbar
button produces
“live” thumbnail previews of the windows
themselves, which
can be a huge help.
Click a thumbnail to
open its window.
Then, as long as
you’re pointing
around, try pointing to one of the
thumbnails. You see
a full-size preview of
the corresponding
window (in this case,
a Web window).
Click the thumbnail
to make that window
active.

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Button Groups
In the old days, opening a lot of windows might produce a relatively useless display of
truncated buttons. Not only were the buttons too narrow to read the names of the windows, but the buttons appeared in chronological order, not software-program order.
As you may have noticed, though, Windows 7 automatically consolidates open windows into a single program button. (There’s even a subtle visual sign that a program
Figure 2-27:
An icon without a border is a program you
haven’t opened yet (the second and fourth
ones here). A brightened background indicates
the active (frontmost) program. Right-clicking
one of these buttons lets you perform tasks on
all the windows together, such as closing them
all at once.

Figure 2-28:
Top: Cascading
windows are
neatly arranged
so you can see
the title bar for
each window.
Click any title
bar to bring that
window to the
foreground as the
active window.
Bottom: You may
prefer to see
your windows
displayed stacked
(left) or side-byside (right).

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has multiple windows open: Its taskbar icon appears to be “stacked,” like the first and
third icons in Figure 2-27.) All the Word documents are accessible from the Word
icon, all the Excel documents sprout from the Excel icon, and so on.

Taskbar 2.0

Point to a taskbar button to see the thumbnails of the corresponding windows, complete with their names; click to jump directly to the one you want.
Despite all the newfangled techniques, some of the following time-honored basics
still apply:
•• If a program has only one window open, you can hide or show it by clicking the
program’s taskbar button—a great feature that a lot of PC fans miss. (To hide
a background window, click its taskbar button twice: once to bring the window
forward, then a pause, then again to hide it.)
•• To minimize, maximize, restore, or close a window, even if you can’t see it on the
screen, point to its program’s button on the taskbar. When the window thumbnails
pop up, right-click the one you want, and choose from the shortcut menu.
nostalgia corner

Bringing Back the Old Taskbar
The taskbar’s tendency to consolidate the names of document windows into a single program button saves space,
for sure.
Even so, it’s not inconceivable that you might prefer the
old system, in which there’s one taskbar button for every
single window. For example, the new consolidated-window
scheme means you can’t bring a certain application to the

While you’re rooting around in here, consider also turning on “Use small icons.” That step replaces the inch-tall,
unlabeled, Mac-style taskbar icons with smaller, half-height
ones. Click OK.
The only weirdness now: Icons representing programs that
aren’t open right now—icons you’ve pinned to the taskbar
for quick access—appear only as icons, without labels, and

front just by clicking its taskbar button. (You must actually
choose one particular window from among its thumbnails,
which is a lot more effort.)

the effect is somewhat disturbing. You can get rid of them,
if you want; just right-click each and choose “Unpin this
program from taskbar.”

To make Windows display the taskbar the old way, right-click
an empty area of the taskbar and choose Properties from
the shortcut menu. From the “Taskbar buttons” pop-up
menu, choose either “Never combine” or “Combine when
taskbar is full” (meaning “only as necessary”). Click Apply;
you now have the wider, text-labeled taskbar buttons from
the pre-Win7 days, as shown here.

Now you have a taskbar that looks almost exactly like the
Windows XP taskbar—except that it still has a shiny, glass,
modern look. If you want to complete your rewind fully, you
can also choose the Classic theme (page 176), giving you
a coarser, uglier, older look. It’s as though the taskbar has
just arrived in a time machine from 1995.

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•• Windows can make all open windows visible at once, either by cascading them,
stacking them, or displaying them in side-by-side vertical slices. (All three options
are shown in Figure 2-28.) To create this effect, right-click a blank spot on the
taskbar and choose Cascade Windows from the shortcut menu.
Note: Actually, there’s a fourth way to see all your windows at once: Flip 3D, described earlier in this chapter.
The cascading/stacking business is an older method of plucking one window out of a haystack.

•• To hide all open windows in one fell swoop, press w+D. Or right-click a blank
spot on the taskbar and choose “Show the desktop” from the shortcut menu. Or
point to (or click) the Show Desktop rectangle at the far right end of the taskbar.
To bring the windows back, repeat that step.
Tip: When the taskbar is crowded with buttons, it may not be easy to find a blank spot to click. Usually
there’s a little gap near the right end; you can make it easier to find some blank space by enlarging the
taskbar, as described on page 114.

The Taskbar as App Launcher
Each time you open a program, its icon appears on the taskbar. That’s the way it’s
always been. And when you exit that program, its icon disappears from the taskbar.
In Windows 7, however, there’s a twist. Now you can pin a program’s icon to the taskbar so that it’s always there, even when it’s not open. One quick click opens the app.
The idea, of course, is to put frequently used programs front and center, always on
the screen, so you don’t have to burrow into the Start menu to find them.
To pin a program to the taskbar in this way, use one of these two tricks:
•• Drag a program’s icon directly to any spot on the taskbar, as shown in Figure 2-29.
You can drag them from any Explorer window, from the desktop, from the left side
of the Start menu, or (most conveniently) from the Start menu’s All Programs list.
•• Right-click a program’s icon (or its shortcut icon), wherever it happens to be.
From the shortcut menu, choose “Pin to Taskbar.” The icon appears instantly at
the right end of the taskbar. This technique requires less mousing, of course, but
it also deprives you of the chance to specify where the new icon goes.
Once an icon is on the taskbar, you can open it with a single click. By all means, stick
your favorites there; over the years, you’ll save yourself thousands of unnecessary
Start-menu clicks.
Tip: If you Shift+click a taskbar icon, you open another window for that program—for example, a new Webbrowser window, a new Microsoft Word document, and so on. (Clicking with your mouse’s scroll wheel,
or middle mouse button, does the same thing.) Add the Ctrl key to open the program as an administrator.
And if you Shift+right-click a taskbar icon, you see the same menu of window-management commands
(Cascade, Restore, and so on) that you get when you right-click a blank spot on the taskbar.

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If you change your mind about a program icon you’ve parked on the taskbar, it’s easy
to move an icon to a new place—just drag it with your mouse.

Taskbar 2.0

You can also remove one altogether. Right-click the program’s icon—in the taskbar
or anywhere on your PC—and, from the shortcut menu, choose “Unpin this program
from taskbar.”
Note: The taskbar is really intended to display the icons of programs. If you try to drag a file or folder, you’ll
succeed only in adding it to a program’s jump list, as described next. If you want quick, one-click access to
files, folders, and disks, you can have it—by using the Links toolbar (page 116).

Figure 2-29:
To install a program
on your taskbar, drag
its icon to any spot; the
other icons scoot aside to
make room.

Jump Lists: Taskbar Edition
Jump lists, new in Windows 7, are submenus that list frequently or recently opened
files in each of your programs. On the taskbar, each program’s icon has its own jump
list. (Jump lists can also sprout from your programs’ icons in the Start menu, as
described on page 52.)
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Taskbar 2.0

To open a jump list, right-click an icon on your taskbar. The list pops right up, as
shown in Figure 2-30.
All of this is designed to save you time, mousing, and folder-burrowing.
Figure 2-30:
Tip: Instead of
right-clicking the
taskbar icon, you
can swipe upward
from the icon with
your mouse or
trackpad finger.
This gesture was
intended for use
on touchscreen
computers, where
right-clicking is
awfully hard to do
with your pointer
finger. But it works
equally well on
any PC.

Ordinarily, Windows builds jump lists for you automatically, tracking the documents
you open. Your Web browser’s jump list tracks your recent and most-visited sites, for
example. Your Excel icon’s jump list shows the spreadsheets you’ve had open most
recently.
But you can also install files manually into a program’s jump list—in Windows-ese,
you can pin a document to a program’s jump list so that it’s not susceptible to replacement by other items.
For example, you might pin the chapters of a book you’re working on to your Word
jump list. To the Windows Explorer jump list, you might pin the folder and disk locations you access often.
You can pin a file or folder to a jump list in any of three ways:
•• Drag an icon directly onto a blank spot on the taskbar. You can drag a document
(or its file shortcut) from the desktop, an Explorer window, or the Start menu.

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(You can drag it onto its “parent” program’s icon if you really want to, but the
taskbar itself is a bigger target.)

Taskbar 2.0

As shown in Figure 2-31, a tooltip appears: “Pin to Adobe Photoshop” (or whatever
the parent program is). Release the mouse. You’ve just pinned the document to its
program’s taskbar jump list.
Note: If the document’s parent program doesn’t already appear on the taskbar, it does now. In other words,
if you drag a Beekeeper Pro document onto the taskbar, Windows is forced to install the Beekeeper Pro
program icon onto the taskbar in the process. Otherwise, how would you open the jump list?

Figure 2-31:
Left: Drag a
document icon
to the taskbar
and release.
Middle: That
document’s
name now appears in its parent program’s
jump list.
Right: You can
also pin something already in
the jump list.

•• In an existing jump list, click the pushpin icon. If the document already appears
in a jump list, you can move it up into the Pinned list at the top of the jump list
this way. Now it won’t be dislodged over time by other files you open.
gem in the rough

Secret Keystrokes of the Taskbar Icons
There’s secret keyboard shortcuts lurking in them taskbar
icons.
It turns out that the first 10 icons, left to right, have built-in
keystrokes that “click” them: the w key plus the numbers
1, 2, 3, and so on (up to 0, which means 10).
If you use this keystroke to “click” the icon of a program
that’s not running, it opens up as though you’d clicked it. If

you “click” a program that has only one window open, that
window pops to the front. If you “click” a program with more
than one window open, the icon sprouts thumbnail previews
of all of them, and the first window pops to the front.
Remember that you can drag icons around on the taskbar,
in effect reassigning those 1-through-0 keystrokes.

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Taskbar 2.0

Tip: If you drag a folder (or a shortcut of one) onto the taskbar, it gets pinned in the Windows Explorer
icon’s jump list.

•• If the file appears in another program’s jump list, drag it onto the new program’s
taskbar icon. For example, maybe you opened a document in WordPad (it’s in
WordPad’s jump list), but you want to move it to Microsoft Word’s jump list.
To do that, drag the document’s name out of WordPad’s list and then drop it onto
Word’s taskbar icon. It now appears pinned in both programs’ jump lists.
Removing things from your taskbar jump lists is just as easy. Open a program’s jump
list, point to anything in the Pinned list, and click the “Unpin from this list” pushpin.
Note: Once it’s unpinned, the file’s name may jump down into the Recent section of the jump list, which
is usually fine. If that’s not fine, you can erase it from there, too; right-click its name and, from the shortcut
menu, choose “Remove from this list.” (Of course, you’re not actually deleting the file.)

Figure 2-32:
You can point to a status icon’s name without
clicking (to see its name) or click one to see its
pop-up menu of options.

Action Center
Power

Volume
Network

You can also erase your jump lists completely—for privacy, for example. For details,
and for other caveats about jump lists, see page 54.

The Notification Area (System Tray)
The notification area gives you quick access to little status indicators and pop-up
menus that control various functions of your PC (Figure 2-32).
This area has been a sore spot with PC fans for years. Many a software installer inserts
its own little icon into this area: fax software, virus software, palmtop synchronization
software, and so on. So before Windows 7 came along, the tray eventually filled with
junky, confusing little icons that had no value to you—but made it harder to find the
icons you did want to track.
In Windows 7, all that is history. Out of the box, only a handful of Windows icons
appear here. Each one offers three displays: one when you point without clicking, one
when you click the icon, and a third when you right-click the icon. Here’s what you
start with:
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•• Action Center (F). This humble, tiny icon is the front end for one of Win7’s best
new features: the Action Center. It’s a single, consolidated command center for all
the little nags that Windows used to bury you with.

Taskbar 2.0

Nowadays, Windows may still whimper because you have no antivirus program,
because your backup is out of date, because there are Windows updates to install,
or whatever. But this icon will sprout a balloon just once, for a few seconds, and
then leave you alone after that.
Note: When all is well, the Action Center icon looks like a tiny flag (F); when you’ve ignored some of its
warnings, a circled X appears on the flag (a).

If you ever actually care what Windows is griping about, you have several options.
Point to the icon without clicking to see how many important messages are waiting.
Click to see the most important messages (or click a link to take care of them).
Right-click for links to the Action Center itself (Chapter 10), a troubleshooting
wizard, or Windows Update (page 662).
•• Power (p, laptops only). Point to the tiny battery icon without clicking to view the
time-remaining (and percentage-remaining) readout for your laptop battery. Click
for a choice of power plan (page 326)—and for a detailed battery juice–remaining
readout, in minutes and in percentage of capacity. Right-click for access to the
Power Options control panel and the Windows Mobility Center (see Chapter 19).
•• Network (n or N). Point to see the name of your current network and whether or
not it’s connected to the Internet. Click for a list of available networks; the wireless
(WiFi) ones in the list come with icons for signal strength and “locked” (passwordprotected) status. You can switch networks by clicking one’s name. Right-click for
a shortcut menu that offers direct access to a troubleshooting screen and to the
Network and Sharing Center.
•• Volume (v). Point to see a tooltip that says, for example, “Speakers: 67%” (of full
volume). Click for a volume slider that controls your PC’s speakers. Right-click
for a shortcut menu that offers direct access to various Control Panel screens, like
Sounds, Recording Devices, and so on.
•• Clock. Shows the current date and time. Point to see today’s full date, with day
of the week (“Thursday, January 17, 2013”). Click for a pop-up clock and minicalendar, which you can use to check, for example, what day of the week March 9,
2016, falls on. (Right-clicking the Clock doesn’t offer anything special—just the
same shortcut menu that appears when you right-click a blank spot on the taskbar.)
Tip: You can drag system-tray icons around to rearrange them—not just these starter icons, but any that you
install, as described below. A vertical insertion-point line appears to show you where the icon will go when
you release the mouse.

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Taskbar 2.0

Revealing the hidden status icons
So if these are the only authorized status icons, what happened to all the other junky
ones deposited there by your software programs?
They’re hidden until you summon them. Click the tiny ≤ at the left end of the system
tray to see them, safely corralled in a pop-up palette (Figure 2-33).
Figure 2-33:
Left: Nowadays, your taskbar isn’t
overrun by useless software-company
icons. They’re all hidden in this pop-up
corral.
Right: You can drag them around
within this bubble to rearrange them,
or drag them into or out of the bubble
to hide or un-hide specific icons.

Reinstating the hidden icons
OK, so now you know where the additional, non-Microsoft status icons are hidden.
Thank you, Windows, for sparing us from Creeping Iconitus.
But what if you want one of those inferior icons to appear in the system tray? What
if you don’t want Windows to hide them away in the popup window (Figure 2-33)?
No big whoop. Just drag them out of the “hidden” corral and back onto the taskbar.
Or you can do it the long way, by opening the Notification Area control panel and
bringing them back (see Figure 2-34).
Here, you see a list of all of those secondary, usually-hidden status icons. For each
one, you can use the pop-up menu to choose from the following:
•• Show Icon And Notifications. This icon will always appear in the system tray,
unhidden at last.
•• Hide Icon And Notifications. The icon is hidden. If the icon wants to get your
attention by popping up a message, too bad; Windows stifles all notifications.
•• Only Show Notifications. This icon is hidden, but if it needs your attention, Windows will still show you its notification pop-ups.
Hiding icons you rarely use is a noble ambition. Most of the time, you truly won’t
miss them, and their absence will make the icons you do use stand out all the more.

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It’s worth noting, by the way, that you have these options even for the basic Windows
icons described above: Volume, Network, Power, and so on. If you don’t want the date
and time eating up taskbar space, then, by golly, you can hide it.

Taskbar 2.0

Tip: Actually, the Clock item doesn’t appear in the dialog box shown in Figure 2-34. If you want to hide the
date and time, click ”Turn system icons on or off” at the bottom of that box. You arrive in another dialog
box, this one dedicated exclusively to on/off switches for the basic Windows icons: Power, Action Center,
Network, Volume—and, yes, Clock.

Figure 2-34:
To open this control panel,
click the tiny ≤ at the left end
of the system tray, and then
click Customize. (Or open the
Start menu; type as much of
the word notification as necessary until you see, and can
click, Notification Area Icons.)

Revealing all system-tray icons
One last thought: If your intention in visiting the Notification Area Icons box (Figure 2-34) is to turn on all system-tray icons—maybe to recreate the halcyon days of
Windows XP—you can save yourself some time. Just turn on “Always show all icons
and notifications on the taskbar.” (It’s at the bottom of the dialog box.)
Now all the icons appear in the system tray, the Behaviors pop-up menus are dimmed
to show you’ve overridden them, and the little ≤ button at the left end of the system
tray goes away. That’s a lot faster than adjusting the Behaviors pop-up menu individually for each icon.

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Get the Taskbar Out
of Your Hair

Tip: You have complete keyboard control over the system tray. Press w+B to highlight the first icon—the
little ≤ button. Then press the arrow keys to “walk” through the other icons. Press the space bar to “click”
whatever icon is highlighted, opening its menu. (Press the Menu key or Shift+F10 to “right-click” the icon.)

Three Ways to Get the Taskbar Out of Your Hair
All Versions

The bottom of the screen isn’t necessarily the ideal location for the taskbar. Virtually
all screens are wider than they are tall, so the taskbar eats into your limited vertical
screen space. You have three ways out: Hide the taskbar, shrink it, or rotate it 90 degrees.

Auto-Hiding the Taskbar
To turn on the taskbar’s auto-hiding feature, start by right-clicking a blank spot on
the taskbar, and then choose Properties from the shortcut menu. The dialog box that
appears offers a checkbox called “Auto-hide the taskbar.” This feature makes the taskbar
disappear whenever you’re not using it—a clever way to devote your entire screen to
application windows and yet have the taskbar at your cursor tip when needed.
When this feature is turned on, the taskbar disappears whenever you click elsewhere,
or whenever your cursor moves away from it. Only a thin line at the edge of the screen
indicates that you have a taskbar at all. As soon as your pointer moves close to that
line, the taskbar joyfully springs back into view.
Tip: On paper, an auto-hiding taskbar is ideal; it’s there only when you summon it. In practice, however, you
may find that the extra half-second the taskbar takes to appear and disappear makes this feature slightly less
appealing. Fortunately, you can hide and show the taskbar at will by pressing the hide/show key—namely, the
w key. Now you can make the taskbar pop in and out instantly, without requiring you to move the mouse.

Changing the Taskbar’s Size
Even with the button-grouping feature, the taskbar can still accumulate a lot of buttons and icons. As a result, you may want to enlarge the taskbar to see what’s what.
•• The draggy way. First, ensure that the toolbar isn’t locked (which means you can’t
move or resize it). Right-click a blank spot on the taskbar; from the shortcut menu,
uncheck “Lock the taskbar,” if necessary.
Now position your pointer on the upper edge of the taskbar (or, if you’ve moved
the taskbar, whichever edge is closest to the center of the screen). When the pointer
turns into a double-headed arrow, drag to make the taskbar thicker or thinner.
Note: If you’re resizing a taskbar that’s on the top or bottom of the screen, it automatically changes its size
in full taskbar-height increments. You can’t fine-tune the height; you can only double or triple it, for example.
If it’s on the left or right edge of your screen, however, you can resize the taskbar freely. If you’re not careful,
you can make it look really weird.

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•• The dialog-box way. In the Properties dialog box for the taskbar (right-click it;
choose Properties from the shortcut menu), an option called “Use small icons”
appears. As described in the box on page 105, it cuts those inch-tall taskbar icons
down to half size, for a more pre-Win7 look.

Get the Taskbar Out
of Your Hair

Moving the Taskbar to the Sides of the Screen
Yet another approach to getting the taskbar out of your way is to rotate it so that it
sits vertically against a side of your screen. You can rotate it in either of two ways:
•• The draggy way. First, ensure that the toolbar isn’t locked, as described above.
(Right-click a blank spot; from the shortcut menu, uncheck “Lock the taskbar.”)
Now you can drag the taskbar to any edge of the screen, using any blank spot in
the central section as a handle. (You can even drag it to the top of your screen, if
you’re a true rebel.) Release the mouse when the taskbar leaps to the edge you’ve
indicated with the cursor.
Tip: No matter which edge of the screen holds your taskbar, your programs are generally smart enough to
adjust their own windows as necessary. In other words, your Word document will shift sideways so that it
doesn’t overlap the taskbar you’ve dragged to the side of the screen.

•• The dialog-box way. Right-click a blank spot on the taskbar; from the shortcut
menu, choose Properties. Use the “Taskbar location on screen” pop-up menu to
choose Left, Right, Top, or Bottom. (You can do this even if the taskbar is locked.)
You’ll probably find that the right side of your screen works better than the left. Most
programs put their document windows against the left edge of the screen, where the
taskbar and its labels might get in the way.
Note: When you position your taskbar vertically, what was once the right side of the taskbar becomes the
bottom. In other words, the Clock appears at the bottom of the vertical taskbar. So as you read references
to the taskbar in this book, mentally substitute the phrase “bottom part of the taskbar” when you read references to the “right side of the taskbar.”

Taskbar Toolbars
All Versions

You’d be forgiven if you’ve never even heard of taskbar toolbars; this is one obscure
feature.
These toolbars are separate horizontal sections on the taskbar that offer specialfunction features. You can even build your own toolbars—for example, one stocked
with documents related to a single project. (Somewhere in America, there’s a self-help
group for people who spend entirely too much time fiddling with this kind of thing.)

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To make a toolbar appear or disappear, right-click a blank spot on the taskbar and
choose from the Toolbars submenu that appears (Figure 2-35). The ones with checkmarks are the ones you’re seeing now; you can click to turn them on and off.
Tip: You can’t adjust the toolbars’ widths until you unlock the taskbar (right-click a blank spot and turn off
“Lock the taskbar”). Now each toolbar is separated from the main taskbar by a dotted “grip strip.” Drag this
strip to make the toolbar wider or narrower.

Figure 2-35:
Top: Make toolbars
appear by rightclicking a blank area
on the taskbar, if
you can find one.
Bottom: Toolbars eat
into your taskbar
space, so use them
sparingly. If you’ve
added too many
icons to the toolbar,
a h button appears
at its right end. Click
it to expose a list of
the commands or
icons that didn’t fit.

Here’s a rundown of the ready-made taskbar toolbars at your disposal.

Address Toolbar
This toolbar offers a duplicate copy of the address bar that appears in every Explorer
window, complete with a Recent Addresses pop-up menu—except that it’s always
available, even if no Explorer window happens to be open.

Links Toolbar
From its name alone, you might assume that the purpose of this toolbar is to provide
links to your favorite Web sites. And sure enough, that’s one thing it’s good for.

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But in fact, you can drag any icon at all onto this toolbar—files, folders, disks, programs, or whatever—to turn them into one-click buttons.

Get the Taskbar Out
of Your Hair

In other words, the Links toolbar duplicates the “park favorite icons” function of
the Start menu, taskbar, and Quick Launch toolbar. But in some ways, it’s better. It
can display any kind of icon (unlike the taskbar). It’s always visible (unlike the Start
menu). And it shows the icons’ names.
Note: The Links toolbar is a mirror of the Favorites toolbar in Internet Explorer (ToolsÆToolbarsÆFavorites),
just in case you were baffled. Edit one, you edit the other.

Here are a few possibilities of things to stash here, just to get your juices flowing:
•• Install icons of the three or four programs you use the most (or a few documents
you work on every day).
•• Install the Recycle Bin’s icon, so you don’t have to mouse all the way over to…
wherever you keep the real Recycle Bin.
•• Install icons for shared folders on the network. This arrangement saves several
steps when you want to connect to them.
•• Install icons of Web sites you visit often so you can jump directly to them when
you sit down in front of your PC each morning. (In Internet Explorer, you can
drag the tiny icon at the left end of the address bar directly onto the Links toolbar
to install a Web page there.)
You can drag these links around on the toolbar to put them into a different order, or
remove a link by dragging it away—directly into the Recycle Bin, if you like. (They’re
only shortcuts; you’re not actually deleting anything important.) To rename something
here—a good idea, since horizontal space in this location is so precious—right-click
it and choose Rename from the shortcut menu.
Tip: Dragging a Web link from the Links toolbar to the desktop or an Explorer window creates an Internet
shortcut file. When double-clicked, this special document connects to the Internet and opens the specified
Web page.

Tablet PC Input Panel
This toolbar is useful only if you’re working on a tablet PC, which has a touch screen
and stylus. It provides quick access to Windows’s handwriting-recognition software.
Chapter 19 has the details.

Desktop Toolbar
The Desktop toolbar (Figure 2-35, bottom) offers quick access to whichever icons
are sitting on your desktop—the Recycle Bin, for example, and whatever else you’ve
put there. As a convenience, it also lists a few frequently used places that aren’t on
the desktop, including your Personal folder, your libraries, Homegroup, Network,
Control Panel, and so on.

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Get the Taskbar Out
of Your Hair

When it first appears, the Desktop toolbar takes the form of a >> button at the right
end of the taskbar. You can widen the Desktop toolbar if you like, making its buttons
appear horizontally on the taskbar. But if you leave it compressed, then many of its
icons sprout pop-up submenus that give you direct access to their contents. That’s a
useful way to get at your stuff when your screen is filled with windows.

Redesigning Your Toolbars
To change the look of a toolbar, first unlock it. (Right-click it; from the shortcut menu,
choose “Lock the taskbar,” if necessary, so that the checkmark disappears. Later, repeat
this procedure to lock the taskbar again.)
Next, right-click any blank spot on the toolbar. The resulting shortcut menu offers
these choices, which appear above the usual taskbar shortcut menu choices:
nostalgia corner

Bringing Back the Quick Launch Toolbar
The whole point of the old Quick Launch toolbar was to
display the icons of programs you used a lot—exactly like the
new Windows 7 taskbar itself. So Microsoft took the Quick
Launch toolbar out behind the barn and shot it.
Besides, if “a toolbar filled with icons of my choosing, ready
for one-click opening” is the idea behind the Quick Launch
toolbar, why not use the Links toolbar or the “build your
own” toolbar described on these pages?
Well, all right. If you really feel it’s that important to have the
Quick Launch toolbar—the
actual, original one—you can
bring it back.
Start by creating a folder
that contains the icons for
everything you want displayed on the toolbar.
Now right-click a blank spot on the taskbar. From the shortcut
menu, choose ToolbarsÆNew Toolbar. In the resulting
dialog box, type this (AutoComplete is there to help you
save typing)…
%appdata%\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch
…and then click Select Folder.
And presto: The Quick Launch toolbar now appears on your
taskbar. It works exactly like the Links toolbar, in that you

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can drag anything onto it for easy access: folder, file, disk,
shortcut, program…anything with an icon.
It still doesn’t look much like the old Quick Launch toolbar,
though. But you can fix that.
First, unlock the taskbar. (Right-click it; from the shortcut
menu, choose “Lock the taskbar,” if necessary, so that the
checkmark disappears.)
Now right-click the Quick Launch toolbar itself; turn off
Show Title and Show Text.
Drag the dotted “grip strip”
handle at the toolbar’s left
edge all the way to the left
so that it’s right next to the
Start menu, where the old
Quick Launch toolbar used to be. Drag the right-side “grip
strip” to adjust the width. Relock the taskbar, if you like.
From now on, you can install any file, folder, or disk onto
this toolbar just by dragging it there. It shows up, tiny but
legible, ready for opening with one click.
If you change your mind, you can get rid of the Quick
Launch toolbar. Right-click the taskbar; from the shortcut
menu, choose ToolbarsÆQuick Launch toolbar, so that the
checkmark disappears.

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•• View lets you change the size of the icons on the toolbar.
•• Open Folder works only with the Quick Launch and Links toolbars.

Get the Taskbar Out
of Your Hair

It turns out that the icons on these toolbars reflect the contents of corresponding
folders on your PC. To see one, right-click a blank spot on the toolbar itself; from
the shortcut menu, choose Open Folder.
Why is that useful? Because it means you can add, rename, or delete icons en masse,
by working in the folder instead of on the toolbar itself. Of course, you can also
delete or rename any icon on these toolbars by right-clicking it and choosing Delete
or Rename from the shortcut menu. But a window isn’t nearly as claustrophobic
as the toolbar itself.
•• Show Text identifies each toolbar icon with a text label.
•• Show Title makes the toolbar’s name (such as “Quick Launch” or “Desktop”) appear on the toolbar.
•• Close Toolbar makes the toolbar disappear.
Tip: How much horizontal taskbar space a toolbar consumes is up to you. Drag the border at the left edge
of a toolbar to make it wider or narrower. That’s a good point to remember if, in fact, you can’t find a blank
spot to right-click on. (Sub-Tip: In a pinch, you can right-click the clock.) Don’t forget that you have to unlock
the toolbar before you can change its size (right-click, and then choose “Lock the taskbar” so the checkmark
disappears).

Figure 2-36:
To create a new
toolbar, begin by
making a folder.
Stock it with the
icons you want to
access from the
taskbar. Amaze
your friends!

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Get the Taskbar Out
of Your Hair

Build Your Own Toolbars
The Quick Launch and Links toolbars are such a delight that you may find that having
only one isn’t enough. You may wish to create several different Links toolbars, each
stocked with the icons for a different project or person. One could contain icons for
all the chapters of a book you’re writing; another could list only your games.
Fortunately, it’s easy to create as many different custom toolbars as you like, each of
which behaves exactly like the Links toolbar.
Windows creates toolbars from folders; so before creating a toolbar of your own, you
must create a folder and fill it with the stuff you want to toolbar-ize.
Next, right-click a blank spot on the taskbar. From the shortcut menu, choose ToolbarsÆNew Toolbar to open the New Toolbar dialog box, as shown in Figure 2-36.
Find and click the folder you want, and then click Select Folder.
Now there’s a brand-new toolbar on your taskbar, whose buttons list the contents of
the folder you selected. Feel free to tailor it as described—by changing its icon sizes,
hiding or showing the icon labels, or installing new icons onto it by dragging them
from other Explorer windows.

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chapter

3

Searching & Organizing
Your Files

E

very disk, folder, file, application, printer, and networked computer is represented on your screen by an icon. To avoid spraying your screen with thousands
of overlapping icons seething like snakes in a pit, Windows organizes icons into
folders, puts those folders into other folders, and so on. This folder-in-a-folder-in-afolder scheme works beautifully at reducing screen clutter, but it means that you’ve
got some hunting to do whenever you want to open a particular icon.
Helping you find, navigate, and manage your files, folders, and disks with less stress
and greater speed was one of the primary design goals of Windows 7—and of this
chapter. The following pages cover Search, plus icon-management life skills like
selecting them, renaming them, moving them, copying them, making shortcuts of
them, assigning them to keystrokes, deleting them, and burning them to CD or DVD.

Tip: To create a new folder to hold your icons, right-click where you want the folder to appear (on the
desktop or in any desktop window except Computer), and choose NewÆFolder from the shortcut menu.
The new folder appears with its temporary “New Folder” name highlighted. Type a new name for the folder
and then press Enter.

Meet Windows Search
All Versions

Every computer offers a way to find files. And every system offers several different
ways to open them. But Search combines these two functions in a way that’s so fast,
so efficient, and so spectacular, it reduces much of what you’ve read in the previous
chapters to irrelevance. It works like Google Desktop (or Spotlight on the Macintosh),
in that it finds files as you type what you’re looking for—not like Windows XP, which
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Meet Windows
Search

doesn’t start searching until you’re finished typing and takes a very long time to find
things at that.
It’s important to note, though, that you can search for files on your PC using the
superfast Search box in two different places:
•• The Start menu. The Start Search box at the bottom of the Start menu searches
everywhere on your computer.
•• Explorer windows. The Search box at the top of every desktop window searches
only that window (including folders within it). You can expand it, too, into something called the Search pane—a way to limit the scope of your search to certain
file types or date ranges, for example.
Search boxes also appear in the Control Panel window, Internet Explorer, Windows
Mail, Windows Media Player, and other spots where it’s useful to perform small-time,
limited searches. The following pages, however, cover the two main Search boxes, the
ones that hunt down files and folders.

Search from the Start Menu
All Versions

Start by opening the Start menu, either by using the mouse or by pressing the w key.
The “Search programs and files” box appears at the bottom of the Start menu; you
can immediately begin typing to identify what you want to find and open (Figure
3-1). For example, if you’re trying to find a file called “Pokémon Fantasy League.doc,”
typing just pok or leag will probably work.
Capitalization doesn’t count, and neither do accent marks; typing cafe finds files with
the word “café” just fine. (You can change this, however; see page 136.)
As you type, the familiar Start menu items are replaced by search results (Figure 3-1).
This is a live, interactive search; that is, Windows modifies the menu as you type—you
do not have to press Enter after entering your search phrase.
The results menu lists every file, folder, program, email message, address book entry,
calendar appointment, picture, movie, PDF document, music file, Web bookmark,
and Microsoft Office document (Word, PowerPoint, and Excel) that contains what
you typed, regardless of its name or folder location.
up to speed

Directories vs. Folders
Before Windows took over the universe, folders were called
directories, and folders inside them were called subdirecto-

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ries. Keep that in mind the next time you’re reading an old
user guide, magazine article, or computer book.

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Windows isn’t just searching icon names. It’s also searching their contents—the
words inside your documents—as well as all your files’ metadata. (That’s descriptive
text information about what’s in a file, like its height, width, size, creator, copyright
holder, title, editor, created date, and last modification date. Page 86 has the details.)

Search from the
Start Menu

Note: Windows is constantly updating its invisible index (page 132) in real time. You can prove it to yourself
like this: Open a text document (in WordPad, for example). Type an unusual word, like wombat. Save the
document using a different name—say, “Fun Pets.” Now immediately do a search. Hit the w key and type
wom, for example. You’ll see that Windows finds “Fun Pets” even though it’s only moments old. That’s a
far cry from, for example, the old Windows Indexing Service, which updated its index only once a day, in
the middle of the night!

Figure 3-1:
Press w, or click the
Start-menu icon, to
see the Search box.
As you type, Windows builds the list
of every match it can
find, neatly arranged
in categories: Programs, Documents,
and so on.
You don’t have to
type an entire word.
Typing kumq will
find documents
containing the
word “kumquat.”
However, it’s worth
noting that Windows
recognizes only the
beginnings of words.
Typing umquat won’t
find a document
containing—or even
named—“Kumquat.”
Press the , or .
keys keys to walk
through the list one
item at a time.

If you see the icon you were hoping to dig up, double-click it to open it. Or use the
arrow keys to “walk down” the menu, and then press Enter to open it.

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Search from the
Start Menu

If you choose a program (programs are listed first in the results menu), well, that
program pops onto the screen. Selecting an email message opens that message in
your email program. And so on.
As you’ll soon learn, Search threatens to make all that folders-in-folders business nearly
pointless. Why burrow around in folders when you can open any file or program with
a couple of keystrokes?

The “More Results” Window
Windows’s menu shows you only about 15 results. Unless you own one of those
extremely rare 60-inch Skyscraper Displays, there just isn’t room to show you the
whole list.
Instead, Windows uses some fancy behind-the-scenes analysis to calculate and display the 15 or so most likely matches for what you typed. They appear grouped into
categories like Programs, Pictures, Control Panel, and Documents. The number in
parentheses shows how many items are in each category.
Tip: If you click one of these category headings, you open a window containing just the search results in
that category. Kind of handy, really.

Having such a short list of likely suspects means it’s easy to arrow-key your way to
the menu item you want to open. But at the bottom of the menu, a link called “See
more results” is a reminder that there may be many other candidates. Click it to open
the results window, shown in Figure 3-2.
Figure 3-2:
You can open this window by clicking
a link called “See more results” in
the Start menu’s results list. “More,”
in this case, means “every­thing
Windows found except programs and
Control Panel items.”

Now you have access to the complete list of matches, listed in typical Explorer-window
format, using the new Content view (so that you can read the first few lines of text in
each file, for example). As a bonus, the text that matches your search query is highlighted in each file’s name, also shown in Figure 3-2. You can sort this list, group it,
or filter it exactly as described in Chapter 2.
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The only difference is that the task toolbar (Organize, Views, and so on) offers a button that doesn’t usually adorn standard folder windows, called “Save search.” Details
on this item later in this chapter.

Search from the
Start Menu

This Search Results window offers a suite of additional tools for continuing your
quest. For example, if you choose OrganizeÆLayoutÆPreview pane, you open the
right-hand Preview panel. It shows you the contents of each icon you click in the list
(a picture, a playable movie or sound, the text in a Word file, and so on), which can
be a great help in trying to figure out what these things are.
You can also click one of the “Search again in:” icons at the bottom of the results list.
They represent specialized places where you can repeat the same search: just in your
libraries, on the Internet, across your homegroup (page 775), or whatever. If you want
to repeat the search in a particular folder or disk, click Custom to specify it.

Limit by Size, Date, Rating, Tag, Author…
Suppose you’re looking for a file called Big Deals.doc. But when you type big into the
Search box, you wind up wading through hundreds of files that contain the word “big.”
It’s at times like these that you’ll be grateful for Windows’s little-known criterion
searches. These are syntax tricks that help you create narrower, more targeted searches.
All you have to do is prefix your search query with the criterion you want, followed
by a colon.
One example is worth a thousand words, so several examples should save an awful
lot of paper:
•• name: big finds only documents with “big” in their names. Windows ignores anything with that term inside the file.
•• tag: crisis finds only icons with “crisis” as a tag—not as part of the title or contents.
•• created: 7/25/10 finds everything you wrote on July 25, 2010. You can also use
modified: today or modified: yesterday, for that matter. Or don’t be that specific.
Just use modified: July or modified: 2010.
You can use symbols like < and >, too. To find files created since yesterday, you
could type created: >yesterday.
Or use two dots to indicate a range. To find all the email you got in the first two
weeks of March 2010, you could type received: 3/1/2010..3/15/2010. (That two-dot
business also works to specify a range of file sizes, as in size: 2 MB..5 MB.)
Tip: That’s right: Windows recognizes human terms like today, yesterday, this week, last week, last month,
this month, and last year.

•• size: >2gb finds all the big files on your PC.
•• rating: <*** finds documents to which you’ve given ratings of three stars or fewer.
•• camera model: Nikon D90 finds all the pictures you took with that camera.

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Search from the
Start Menu

•• kind: email finds all the email messages.
That’s just one example of the power of kind. Here are some other kinds you can
look for: calendar, appointment, or meeting (appointments in Outlook, or iCal or
vCalendar files); communication (email and attachments); contact or person (vCard
and Windows Contact files, Outlook contacts); doc or document (text, Office, PDF,
and Web files); folder (folders, .zip files, .cab files); link (shortcut files); music or
song (audio files, Windows Media playlists); pic or picture (graphics files like JPEG,
PNG, GIF, and BMP); program (programs); tv (shows recorded by Windows Media
Center); and video (movie files).
•• The folder: prefix limits the search to a certain folder or library. (The starter words
under:, in:, and path: work the same way.) So folder: music confines the search
to your Music library, and a search for in: documents turtle finds all files in your
Documents library containing the word “turtle.”
Tip: You can combine multiple criteria searches, too. For example, if you’re pretty sure you had a document
called “Naked Mole-Rats” that you worked on yesterday, you could cut directly to it by typing mole modified:
yesterday or modified: yesterday mole. (The order doesn’t matter.)

So where’s the master list of these available criteria? It turns out that they correspond
to the column headings at the top of an Explorer window that’s in Details view: Name,
Date modified, Type, Size, and so on.
You’re not limited to just the terms you see now; you can use any term that can be
an Explorer-window heading. To see them all, right-click any of the existing column
headings in a window that’s in Details view. From the shortcut menu, choose More.
There they are: 115 different criteria, including Size, Rating, Album, Bit rate, Camera
model, Date archived, Language, Nickname, and so on. Here’s where you learn that,
gem in the rough

Wildcards
Windows recognizes two traditional wildcard characters—*
and ?— in its searches.
A wildcard character means “whatever.” So if you search
for *tion, your search will find files named things like motion, nation, intimidation, intuition, and so on. A search like
in*ble would match terms like intangible, incredible, and
indistinguishable.
(Footnote: When placed at the beginning or in the middle
of a search query, these wildcards don’t work to find words
inside your files—only filenames. And there’s not much point
in putting a wildcard character at the end of your search
query, because Windows always acts as though there’s a

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wildcard at the end. That is, if you search for fil, you’ll get
results like filly, filibuster, filbert, and so on, even without *
at the end. The * is more useful at the beginning or middle
of search terms—when searching filenames.)
Here’s a cool tip: When you open an Explorer window, typing
* into the Search box produces a flat, simple list of every
single file in it. That’s a great time-saver when you want to
scan for a certain file but don’t feel like opening all the folders
within folders within folders to find it.
Windows also recognizes the ? wildcard. The difference is
that ? means “One character appears here,” whereas the *
can stand for any number of characters (or no characters).

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for example, to find all your Ohio Address Book friends, you’d search for home state
or province: OH.

Search from the
Start Menu

Dude, if you can’t find what you’re looking for using all those controls, it probably
doesn’t exist.

Special Search Codes
Certain shortcuts in the Search boxes can give your queries more power. For example:
•• Document types. You can type document to find all text, spreadsheet, and PowerPoint files. You can also type a filename extension—.mp3 or .doc or .jpg, for
example—to round up all files of a certain file type.
Tip: That sort of search will include both files whose names end with that filename extension as well as
files whose text contains that extension. If you find that searching for (for example) .jpg produces too many
results, you can try ext: .jpg, or fileext: .jpg, or extension: .jpg, or even fileextension: .jpg. They all work the
same way: They limit the results to files whose names actually end with those filename extensions.

•• Tags, authors. This is payoff time for applying tags or author names to your files
(page 87). In a Search box, you can type, or start to type, Gruber Project (or any
other tag you’ve assigned), and you get an instantaneous list of everything that’s
relevant to that tag. Or you can type Mom or Casey or any other author’s name to
see all the documents that person created.
•• Utility apps. Windows comes with a bunch of geekhead programs that aren’t listed
in the Start menu and have no icons—advanced technical tools like RegEdit (the
Registry Editor), (the command line), and so on. By far the quickest way to open
them is to type their names into the Search box.
In this case, however, you must type the entire name—regedit, not just rege. And
you have to use the program’s actual, on-disk name (regedit), not its human name
(Registry Editor).
•• Quotes. If you type in more than one word, Search works just the way Google does.
That is, it finds things that contain both words somewhere inside.
If you’re searching for a phrase where the words really belong together, though,
put quotes around them. For example, searching for military intelligence rounds up
documents that contain those two words, but not necessarily side by side. Searching
for “military intelligence” finds documents that contain that exact phrase. (Insert
your own political joke here.)
•• Boolean searches. Windows also permits combination-search terms like AND and
OR, better known to geeks as Boolean searches.
That is, you can round up a single list of files that match two terms by typing, say,
vacation AND kids. (That’s also how you’d find documents coauthored by two
specific people—you and a pal, for example.)

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Search from the
Start Menu

Tip: You can use parentheses instead of AND, if you like. That is, typing (vacation kids) finds documents
that contain both words, not necessarily together.

If you use OR, you can find icons that match either of two search criteria. Typing
jpeg OR mp3 will turn up photos and music files in a single list.
The word NOT works, too. If you did a search for dolphins, hoping to turn up seamammal documents, but instead find your results contaminated by football-team
listings, then by all means repeat the search with dolphins NOT Miami. Windows
will eliminate all documents containing “Miami.”
Note: You must type Boolean terms like AND, OR, and NOT in all capitals.

You can even combine Boolean terms with the other special search terms described
in this chapter. Find everything created in the past couple of months by searching for created: September OR October, for example. If you’ve been entering your
name into the Properties dialog box of Microsoft Office documents, you can find
all the ones created by Casey and Robin working together using author: (Casey
AND Robin).

Results Menu Tips
It should be no surprise that a feature as important as Search comes loaded with
options, tips, and tricks. Here it is—the official, unexpurgated Search Tip-O-Rama:
gem in the rough

Natural Language
OK, so very cool: You can search for author: (Casey OR
Robin NOT Smith) created: 

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