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?

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.


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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?

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.

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.

Please minimize or close all other windows, and start up IDLE. Click on the IDLE window to make sure it is active, and post a screen shot of your desktop. (You can crop or erase any personally identifiable information if you need to.)

There is no need to modify the interactive Python icon to open IDLE. If you install IDLE on Windows or Mac, a separate IDLE icon is installed in the Python 3.x folder with multiple icons. On Windows, the Python 3.x folder is on the start menu under P. On Mac, it is in Finder under, I believe, Apps.

It kickstarted a trend in Windows that has lasted more than 20 years, and made it easy for people new to computers to easily navigate around. The Start menu was also an efficient way to store and organize a lot of quick shortcuts in one place.

Microsoft took its Windows XP Start menu changes and tweaked them even further with Windows Vista. While the Start menu looked similar, there were some fundamental changes that alienated longtime Windows users. Microsoft switched to a transparent menu as part of its futuristic-looking "Aero Glass" theme. It was a visual look that many enjoyed, but the translucent effects were also distracting and irritating at times, not to mention taxing for a lot of older and lower-end PCs. Microsoft extended this theme throughout the Start menu, app windows, taskbar, and even in a new sidebar that contained live gadgets.

Windows 11 removed many features that were present in Windows 10, Start11 brings them back. From the basics like returning the right-click menu on the taskbar to ungrouping of windows on the taskbar. You can also choose to have your icons centered on the taskbar with your Start menu left aligned.

Windows 11 lacks features that many users expect but Start11 brings them back including ungrouping windows on the taskbar. Advanced options include the ability to pin local and network drives to the Start menu, create new sections, and more.

My team is creating an application that has a single entry point. There will be a single entry point, meaning only one item on the Windows 7 start menu/Windows 8 start screen. Other than "that's how it is done", can anyone explain why users would benefit from placing this one item a folder? I say that going directly under "All programs" makes it faster to access for users who don't search or use the desktop to start applications.

Not sure if there is a common name for this, usually proprietary names are used ("Start menu", "Apple menu", "System menu" in Ubuntu...). Note that these play different roles in different systems, because they give the user access to different functionalities (Windows menu is mostly oriented for launching applications, and performing some system related actions like shutdown, restart, accessing control panel, while in OSX it's more system oriented, and is not used for launching apps). ff782bc1db

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