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Favorite Shortcuts 1.8.3
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shortcut file, the information available through the Shortcut tab of the Properties page (target, directory, hotkey, etc.). Shortcut files can be moved, copied, deleted, etc., similar to Windows Explorer. New shortcuts can easily be created through drag-n-drop, cut-n-paste, or the system New Shortcut Wizard. Handles *.lnk. *.pif, and *.url shortcuts. Don`t settle for defaults. Take control! Make your Quick Launch, Desktop, Favorites Menu and Start
shortcut file, the information available through the Shortcut tab of the Properties page (target, directory, hotkey, etc.). Shortcut files can be moved, copied, deleted, etc., similar to Windows Explorer. New shortcuts can easily be created through drag-n-drop, cut-n-paste, or the system New Shortcut Wizard. Handles *.lnk. *.pif, and *.url shortcuts. Don`t settle for defaults. Take control! Make your Quick Launch, Desktop, Favorites Menu and Start
menu to the folder context menu (in the File menu, in Explorer and on the Desktop). The menu contains shortcuts to your favorite folders. With these shortcuts, you can navigate the folders you frequently use without having to wander through hard drives, tree structures and folders. The Favorites menu can be expanded at any time and still remain easy to use. Shortcuts can be easily named, moved, grouped or separated optically with lines. Even shortcut
jump folder, desktop, folder browser, change folder, fast access, shell utilities, favorite folder, shell utility, shell enhancement, shell, browse folder, folder shortcut, tools
Menu uses what you type to generate "on-the-fly" alphabetized lists of shortcut items from your `Start` menu and any other folders you have configured to be scanned. Since SmartStartMenu is based on shortcuts (your `Start` menu is just a collection of shortcuts) there is no "alias" database to maintain or complicated configuration interface to learn. You can change the keystrokes used to access an item by modifying the shortcut directly. SmartStartMenu
auto fill, type ahead, hint, toolbar, shortcut, launcher, taskbar, start menu
Menu uses what you type to generate "on-the-fly" alphabetized lists of shortcut items from your `Start` menu and any other folders you have configured to be scanned. Since SmartStartMenu is based on shortcuts (your `Start` menu is just a collection of shortcuts) there is no "alias" database to maintain or complicated configuration interface to learn. You can change the keystrokes used to access an item by modifying the shortcut directly. SmartStartMenu
auto fill, type ahead, hint, toolbar, shortcut, launcher, taskbar, start menu
menus, buttons, etc.) should be familiar. Shortcuts always have a "target" which will be invoked. Depending on the target, the shortcut may open a folder, run a program, open a document, play a music file, open a web page, and so forth. When "Test" is selected (from the Edit menu, clicking the Test button, or by pressing F7), Find Shortcuts checks the target of each shortcut to see if it is valid. Since shortcuts can have a variety of targets, testing