To add apps you want pinned to the Start menu, you use a JSON file. In previous Windows versions, IT administrators used an XML file to customize the Start menu. The XML file isn't available on Windows 11 and later unless you're an OEM.

When you customize the Start layout, you overwrite the entire full layout. A partial Start layout isn't available. Users can pin and unpin apps, and uninstall apps from Start. When a user signs in or Explorer restarts, Windows reapplies the MDM policy. This action restores the specified layout and doesn't retain any user changes.


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In Intune, you can configure this Start menu layout feature, and more. For more information on the Start menu settings you can configure in an Intune policy, see Windows 10/11 device settings to allow or restrict features.

In Group Policy, there are policies that include settings that control the Start menu layout. Some policies may not work as expected. Be sure to test your policies before broadly deploying them across your devices:

I have a PC that should always be on. I recently upgraded to Windows 10 from Windows 7. In Windows 7 I changed the default action of the power button in the start menu to log off from my machine so that I could not accidentally shut it off. However in Windows 10 the start menu changed and this doesn't appear to be possible anymore?

I realize that Windows Server 2012 (and Windows 8) removed the start menu button and replaced it with moving your mouse to the upper right corner of the screen. This works fine when the desktop is full screen. However, I access all my servers through windowed RDP connections (or through the Hyper-V console window) and in this case, the desktop is not full screen.

Therefore, in order to open the new "start" menu, I have to slowly move my mouse very carefully within the window to just a few pixels within top right corner of the window in order to open the menu. Also, because the session is windowed, the default hot keys (Windows + D, etc.) won't work. There has got to be an easier way. Has anyone else experienced this frustration?

When you are finished configuring other settings for your Remote Desktop session, click Connect to connect to the session and start working, or click Save on the General tab to save your connection settings as an RDP file that you can use for future connections.

The Windows Key (the one with the Windows logo) is needed for many shortcuts in Windows 2012 Server and Windows 8, but if you haven't configured your RDP client to pass it through, or you are double-hopping via an intermediate RDP session you can't use it. To get around this I configured my remote Windows 2012 server to always show the on-screen keyboard so I can mouse click the on-screen windows key and then type (or click) the appropriate combination key.

I have a windows 1709 layered desktop with user layers enabled. I just noticed new users cannot use the windows server to search for start menu items. Users that have used for a while can still search. Something must have broken. I am going back now layer by layer to find where it broke. The search service runs. Anyone else have issues with windows search?

However, I cannot bind the start menu to the Windows key alone. If I try replacing "W-m" by "W", the "W" alphabet key gets bound to the start menu. If I try "W-" nothing happens, I have tried the "Super" option too but to no avail.

We are currently developing our Windows 10 Education experience for our users, and have run into issues with the roaming profiles. Currently, when using a roaming profile, the start menu either breaks totally or loses certain icons when logging in for the second time (settings disappears from the right hand side totally). I've read a lot of Microsoft documentation and to be honest I've not really got much further with this issue. Anybody encountered this, or found a workaround/solution? I'm aware of the existence and use of 'Classic shell' (and similar) but that's a last resort for me.

The issue with roaming profiles and the start menu revolves around the 'TileDataLayer' folder in the Local AppData folder. On first login this database is created, and deleted upon logout causing all manner of issues with start menu upon next login. For anyone desperate for roaming to work, take a look at this solution: -10/173918-start-menu-roaming-profiles-fix.html Opens a new window

What's your current setup for roaming desktop users on Win 10 then? I'd been enforcing local profiles for a while with an XML template for start menu's which works well on top of the line desktops with SSD drives as login times were manageable (about 40 seconds for first profile creation) but completely useless on anything a few years old with some initial login times being 2-3 minutes. (The reason for the long profile creation is redirected start menu and desktop btw...) The cataloging process for this really impacts the length of time taken when 'preparing desktop' during the profile build.

If System File Checker replaced any corrupt or missing system files, save all of your open work and restart your computer. Once you log back in, try to open the Start Menu to see if that fixed your issues.

Next, in the Keyboard app, go to the Application Shortcuts tab and remove both of the xfce4-popup-whiskermenu shortcuts (both Super R and Super L).

Start Menu X is a replacement of the system menu for professionals. Compatible with Windows 11

Power users know how inconvenient and time-consuming it is to launch programs from the system menu.

We have created a solution for you!

Virtual GroupsGroup programs by purpose (office applications, graphics, etc) without changing their location on the hard drive.

This is our own one-of-a-kind feature. Start Menu X replaces the yellow folder icons with application icons. Clicking on the folder launches the application. To access a submenu, hover the cursor over a folder for a few seconds. For the first launch, the application launched is determined automatically. Subsequently, the application that you most recently launched becomes the folder's "default application".

Unfortunately, in Windows 11, links to folders were removed from the system menu. You are only given a list of applications, so even getting to the control panel from the menu has become very difficult.

It's a good thing you have Start Menu X! With our program you can configure a customized list of folders. A broad selection of 25 system folders and the ability to add your own folders or applications are what you need to tailor the menu to your individual needs.

The Windows 11 system menu and other applications that thoughtlessly copied the Windows 7 menu force you to use a small window to select applications. Consequently, you have to constantly scroll through this list and make lots of superfluous mouse movements.

Without any additional applications or effort, directly from the menu you can set a timer to shut down or sleep your computer with a delay. This feature is helpful for folks who love to leave the computer on at night to work on resource-intensive tasks and those who just love to listen to music while they're out and about.

During these tests I kept running into an issue with the Start Menu not working properly. The context menu worked is it should, but nothing happened with a regular left click on the Start button. I have run into this issue many times before, in both Windows Server 2016 and Windows 10, the main cause was always either Citrix UPM not being able to handle the Tile Data Service database, or plain old regular Windows Roaming Profile just being old and broken.

As soon as you boot up your system or log on to your user account, Windows 10 automatically runs all programs or files listed in the startup folder. Up until Windows 8, you could view and change these applications directly from the Start menu. As of version 8.1 and higher, including Windows 10, you can only access the startup folder from your personal user files.

There is also an All Users startup folder in addition to your personal startup folder. The applications in this folder run automatically when all users log on. This folder is usually managed by the system administrator. Windows 10 may also need to access this folder itself, for example when installing software.

The startup folder typically only contains links to the programs that you want to start automatically. However, the startup folder can also contain any other files (such as scripts) that you want to run when you log on. In addition to the programs in the Windows 10 startup folder, there are other files that are a permanent part of your operating system and run automatically at startup. These include the Run, RunOnce, RunServices and RunServicesOnce keys in the Windows registry.

Most malware takes advantage of the autostart function of these keys by placing malicious programs in the above registry keys so that the programs run automatically without your knowledge every time you boot up Windows.

As mentioned earlier, the startup folder in Windows 10 is no longer listed directly in the Start menu, although both the user-specific and All Users startup folders are still in the Start menu directory. Here are the exact locations of these folders:

Both folders are buried deep in the directory structures of the Windows 10 partition, which is why the operating system allows you to open either directory using shell commands. To do this, open the Run dialog box from the Start menu or using the keyboard shortcut [Windows] + [R], and then enter one of the following, depending on whether you want to open your own startup folder or the folder for all users: e24fc04721

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