Back to photostream

program_files_menu_organization

I just moved to Windows 7 from XP and I need to figure out how to create a program file menu at the SAME LEVEL as the program file menu. In Windows XP, this was at:

C:\Documents and Setttings\All Users\Start Menu\menu but where is the equivalent location in Windows 7?

 

 

I order my (personalized) start menu just like I order my apps directory and my offline installation disks. I order programs by functionality. So there's no brand name ordering (which is an absolutely ridiculous method of ordering which almost everyone else uses). For example, c:\apps\archivers\izarc, c:\apps\browsers\firefox, c:\apps\cleaners\ccleaner, etc.).

 

The beauty of this system (besides that it makes sense) is that I STORE my offline installers in the same hierarchy (e.g., d:\software\archivers\izarc, d:\software\browsers\firefox, d:\software\cleaners\ccleaner, etc.).

 

Likewise, once I decide on a program organization (I NEVER punt by putting programs in "miscellaneous" or "utilities" or "system tools", etc.), I order the program menu the same way: menu->archivers->shortcut-to-izarc, menu->browsers->shortcut-to-firefox, menu->cleaners->shortcut-to-ccleaner, etc.

 

What most people do is try to arrange the "Start Menu" to their liking. This is nearly futile, and far (far) more work than it should be, simply because it starts polluted by a nonsensical Microsoft organization, then it only gets worse, with each installation of a program putting its readmes and links to web sites and other garbage in the program file menu.

 

For that reason, and for compatibility with anyone else using the system (who expects the utter clutter that Microsoft provides by default), I long ago gave up on managing the default start menu on WinXP.

 

I simply create a new menu, called "menu" (the actual names don't matter), and then I maintain it the same way I maintain my app and software hierarchies.

 

OK. That's WHY I need to figure out in Windows 7 how to simply add a menu at the same level as the "start menu", but OUTSIDE the start menu (usually at the same level).

 

I'll keep looking.

 

158 views
0 faves
0 comments
Uploaded on July 26, 2013
Taken on July 26, 2013