Windows vista user shell folders




















Your SendTo shortcuts, desktop themes, saved searches? Spend a while browsing in Explorer and you'll probably find whatever you need, eventually, but there's a much quicker and easier way: the shell command. So entering shell:Cookies will display the cookies folder; shell:SendTo reveals the Send To shortcuts; shell:ResourceDir brings up your themes, and any searches you've saved are just a shell:searches command away. Don't want to type anything? Shell folders can also be used in shortcuts, for easy embedding in the Start menu.

Drag the shortcut over the Start button, drop it at the very top of the Start menu, then that's it - you now have a menu entry which will call up the Windows Search tool at a click, whenever you need it. So entering shell:Cookies will display the cookies folder; shell:SendTo reveals the Send To shortcuts; shell:ResourceDir brings up your themes, and any searches you've saved are just a shell:searches command away. Don't want to type anything?

Shell folders can also be used in shortcuts, for easy embedding in the Start menu. Drag the shortcut over the Start button, drop it at the very top of the Start menu, then that's it - you now have a menu entry which will call up the Windows Search tool at a click, whenever you need it. There are plenty of other shell folders available.

Windows XP had around 40, this doubled for Vista, rose to over with Windows 7, and Windows 8 adds still more. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions. Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Too technical. Not enough information. Not enough pictures. Do you know the trick? Also is it true that Osama bin Laden was the guy who decided to ruin our civilization by allowing spaces in paths in Windows?

No wonder I can't get anyone to try even the smallest command line gadget. Those spaces are driving me mad!!! The Best Tech Newsletter Anywhere. Join , subscribers and get a daily digest of news, geek trivia, and our feature articles. Articles l l. This post has been reported. Also, as with any time you use the Start menu or Run command, capitalization is unnecessary.



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