- Messages
- 347
If you're going to make a Start Menu toolbar (see the Tutorial
http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/2460-start-menu-toolbar-create-windows-8-taskbar.html?ltr=S),
you should decide which of the two Start Menu folders to use based on your own needs. By this time it's become common knowledge that there are two, but exactly HOW their contents differ has not (to my knowledge) been documented. This summary is confined to the important items in them; and it's based on my own Windows installation, so of course you may find slight variations in yours.
I don't think there's ANY single item that's in both Start Menus. Don't let the names of their sub–folders fool you; they look similar, but their contents are very different. Some of them are empty folders, or just contain one or two things. For example, they both contain "Windows Accessories" sub–folders; but the one in your User SM has only Notepad, and the other one has the rest of the Accessories. They both have "Administrative Tools" sub–folders, but the one in your User SM is empty. And they both have sub–folders called "Windows System," but with two entirely different sets of contents; those in your User SM are the ones frequently used.
For the most part -- but with some exceptions -- the "All–Users" Start Menu
(C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs)
contains the items that are for your own purposes; and YOUR User Start Menu
(C:\Users\(Your UserName)\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs)
contains those whose purposes have to do with the computer itself.
Specifically, the "All–Users" Start Menu (in C:\ProgramData) contains:
-- Google Chrome;
-- The "Communication & Chat" items;
-- All the items about Music/Photo/Video/etc;
-- Live Writer (for blogging);
-- Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote);
-- The "Accessories" (Fax/Scan, Sticky Notes, Snipping Tool, Paint, Wordpad, Calculator);
-- Plus Task Manager, Recovery Manager, and all the "Administrative Tools".
Your User Start Menu (in C:\Users\UserName\AppData) contains:
-- File Explorer;
-- Internet Explorer;
-- Notepad;
-- Computer;
-- Windows Help;
-- Control Panel, Run, and Command Prompt.
So you can make a toolbar from one of these two SM folders, but it won't contain the items in the other; or you can make toolbars from both, but having to look for something in two places might be inconvenient. You can get a single toolbar with all the contents of both, but only by using slightly more complicated methods all of which I've already posted about.
http://www.eightforums.com/tutorials/2460-start-menu-toolbar-create-windows-8-taskbar.html?ltr=S),
you should decide which of the two Start Menu folders to use based on your own needs. By this time it's become common knowledge that there are two, but exactly HOW their contents differ has not (to my knowledge) been documented. This summary is confined to the important items in them; and it's based on my own Windows installation, so of course you may find slight variations in yours.
I don't think there's ANY single item that's in both Start Menus. Don't let the names of their sub–folders fool you; they look similar, but their contents are very different. Some of them are empty folders, or just contain one or two things. For example, they both contain "Windows Accessories" sub–folders; but the one in your User SM has only Notepad, and the other one has the rest of the Accessories. They both have "Administrative Tools" sub–folders, but the one in your User SM is empty. And they both have sub–folders called "Windows System," but with two entirely different sets of contents; those in your User SM are the ones frequently used.
For the most part -- but with some exceptions -- the "All–Users" Start Menu
(C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs)
contains the items that are for your own purposes; and YOUR User Start Menu
(C:\Users\(Your UserName)\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs)
contains those whose purposes have to do with the computer itself.
Specifically, the "All–Users" Start Menu (in C:\ProgramData) contains:
-- Google Chrome;
-- The "Communication & Chat" items;
-- All the items about Music/Photo/Video/etc;
-- Live Writer (for blogging);
-- Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote);
-- The "Accessories" (Fax/Scan, Sticky Notes, Snipping Tool, Paint, Wordpad, Calculator);
-- Plus Task Manager, Recovery Manager, and all the "Administrative Tools".
Your User Start Menu (in C:\Users\UserName\AppData) contains:
-- File Explorer;
-- Internet Explorer;
-- Notepad;
-- Computer;
-- Windows Help;
-- Control Panel, Run, and Command Prompt.
So you can make a toolbar from one of these two SM folders, but it won't contain the items in the other; or you can make toolbars from both, but having to look for something in two places might be inconvenient. You can get a single toolbar with all the contents of both, but only by using slightly more complicated methods all of which I've already posted about.
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- 64-bit Windows 8
- System Manufacturer/Model
- HP 23-D030