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Organise your programs under the Start menu
in Windows XP.
Kai Chandler shows you how
to customise the Start Menu in Microsoft's latest Operating System
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Practical PC top tip
How do you start your ‘Start Menu?’
You can:
·
Click on the Start button.
·
Press the Windows key on your keyboard if fitted.
·
Press Control and Escape keys at the same time. |
Anyone who moved from an earlier version of Windows
to XP may be excused for feeling a trifle bemused over how to
organise program entries under the Start menu.
Each time you install a new program the installer
carves out a new entry in the programs listing. If your system is
like mine, it’ll soon become cluttered with dozens of entries.
There are a couple of things you can do to help you
tidy the entries. You can reorder them and sort them into folders so
similar programs, for example games, appear in the same folder.
Use the Start Programs function to re-order the
entries one by one
It’s
often helpful to reorganise your programs into some sort of logical
order. Perhaps you want to have commonly used programs at the top
of the list. If you want to reorganise your entries then it’s simply
a matter of accessing your Start Menu (see Practical PC top tip in
the table,) selecting an entry and dragging it to where you want it
to be – this is called ‘drag and drop’.
Use Windows Explorer to tidy your program
entries
Windows
98 users will be familiar with organising the entries into folders.
These help you to group similar programs together for ease of use.
For example, I have a folder called Games which contains shortcuts
for all the games on the system. For those not in the know, this was
achieved in ’98 by using the Advanced option under Taskbar and Start
Menu.
Strangely, there’s no equivalent mechanism in XP to
do this from the Start menu, or at least none I’ve come across.
Instead, it’s best to use Windows Explorer to tidy your program
entries, after all they are just shortcuts in the Documents and
Settings folder.
Here’s how to do it:
Start Windows Explorer by right clicking on the
Start button and selecting Explore.
Navigate to C:\Documents and Settings\AllUsers.Windows\Start
Menu. As you’ll find yourself using this folder almost every day
you may as well make life easy. Create a shortcut from the desktop
by right clicking the Start Menu folder and selecting Send to and
then Desktop. This creates an icon on your desktop called ‘shortcut
to Start Menu’
In
the Start Menu folder, you should see a Programs folder and several
other entries.
The Programs folder contains the programs available
on the start menu.
The other entries, which may include AOL, New Office
Document and Open Office Document, are listed on the Start Menu as
shortcuts displayed above a narrow line.
You can easily organise your shortcuts by creating
subfolders in the Programs folder and dragging other shortcuts
entries into them.
For example, to create a Games folder, first select
the Programs folder.
Select
File | New | Folders from the Windows Explorer menu.
Enter Games as the folder name.
You can now drag and drop shortcuts or entire
folders into it. They’ll then appear as Program entries in the Start
Menu.
Now, when you use the Start button and view ‘All
Programs’ you’ll see the new Games folder containing all the entries
you’ve defined.
Next
part
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