Windows Taskbar and Start Menu

by Jeremy Reis on Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Task Bar and System Tray

The Taskbar is the bar at the bottom of the screen that starts with the Start Menu and ends with the System Tray. The Taskbar lists open application and if turned on, has links to frequently accessed applications.

Windows Taskbar

There are several properties you can set by right-clicking on the taskbar and choosing Properties. On Windows XP, you can make the taskbar and Start Menu look like the Windows 2000 version by clicking on the Advanced tab and selecting “Classic Start Menu.”

Start Menu

Nothing has evolved more over the years than the Start Menu. The Start Menu is probably the most frequently accessed part of your system and you use it to open applications, open the Control Panel, or a command prompt.

We started in the Windows 9x era with a small Start Menu, it evolved into a very wide Start Menu with a lot of options in Windows XP, and shrunk down to a more manageable size in Windows Vista (and lost the name “Start” menu – replaced by a Windows logo. Rumor has it that Prince (or the star formerly known as Prince) had a hand in forcing the Start Menu to lose its name into Windows Vista and be replaced by formerly known as the Start Menu. Another rumor is Bill Gates was tired of people using the joke, “Only Microsoft would come with an operating system where you have to click Start to shut down.”

Figure 33: Windows 95 Start Menu

The Windows 95 Start Menu is the first iteration of the Start menu – notice the annoying multiple levels of folders to open what you’re looking for.

Figure 34: Windows 98 Start Menu

Not much changed in the Start Menu from Windows 95 to 98 – other than the number on the left…

Figure 35: Windows ME Start Menu

As you’ll notice in the picture, Windows ME changed… well, not much. Same ole Start Menu.

Figure 36: Windows 2000 Start Menu

Why mess with a good thing? Well, Microsoft apparently didn’t want to. Windows 2000 Professional has the same Start Menu you’re used to.

Windows XP Start Menu

Windows XP changes the Start Menu significantly from previous versions. First, you will see a quick access area to your most frequently used applications. The different menus have changes and moved, with the old Programs menu changed to All Programs and relocated to the bottom.

Windows Vista Start Menu

Microsoft changed the Start Menu in Windows Vista in another attempt to improve user productivity. Now, instead of using a pop-out menu for All Programs, the Vista Start Menu changes the left pane depending on what you are looking for. You will also notice the Run command is missing – it can be added back through the Start Menu Properties dialog box.

A “search” field has been entered at the bottom. It also acts like a Run command – for example, if you type in calc and press Enter, the calculator application will be loaded.

Page 39 of 40

Comments

 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
Informative
Thanks for the info! It's on to the next section! I needed the refresher!
248 out of 447 people found this comment informative.
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
Accessibility
Thanks for this first section but why are the other sections unaccessible?
194 out of 364 people found this comment informative.
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
very good assignment
very good for learning
172 out of 335 people found this comment informative.
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
Other Sections?
Thanks for 1st section. How about other sections?
153 out of 314 people found this comment informative.
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
Section 2 is Posted
Section two is now posted for you to enjoy!
170 out of 321 people found this comment informative.
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
To bulky
the article is usefull but subtitles on this page are  too many
49 out of 104 people found this comment informative.
 Rate This Post:    Rate This Comment as Good Rate This Comment as Bad
rest of sections
is there any chance of rest of sections
32 out of 53 people found this comment informative.

Add a Comment to This Article

Anonymous (Please Login to Post With Your Account)

      
HTML not permitted, some code allowed in [brackets]:
[b]bold[/b] , [i]italicized[/i], [br] line break, other formatting...


Code Image - Please contact webmaster if you have problems seeing this image code Load New Code
Please enter the code above
 
Please submit your comment only once, some comments may be reviewed by moderators
That Network: Interactive Internet Publishing Network DefineThat.com: free technical definitions define wordsExamPractice.com: free certification news and practice exams   Explorestartups.com: find free business plans and business ideas   GiveThat.com: free gift ideas, birthday, Christmas, holidays  helpthat: got questions, we got answers   Jerm.com: entrepreneurship blog   learnthat.com: free software tutorials  mytutorials.com: collaborative write your own tutorials  Publishondemand.net: free publish on demand print on demand pod comparison   Romancetips.com: free romantic tips, advice, dating, date ideas, free romance   seekthat: free technical search engine   selfpublishthat: publish on demand   startupwatch: profiles of new companies   thatgear.com: gadget and electronic reviews   tutorialguru.com: free tutorials