Hi my dear friends, this is only for window7 users. Did you ever think to pin any song to the TaskBar which you want to enjoy again and again on just one click? Yes, you are opening your internetExplorer pressing window+1, you may be using window+2 to open firefox! but?!? when you have to listen to your favourite song which you have put into the subFolder called MyFavourites under the main folder called MyMusic which is located in E drive of your computer so, what would you do nowadays. obviously you are doing the following process: 1. Opening run Dialogue Box. 2. typing in there E: to open the E drive. 3. after pressing enter key, you might be looking for the folder named MyMusic? 4. in that folder you search for the sub folder named MyFavourites! 5. then in that subfolder you find your favourite song which you like to listen to again and again, and there you press enter to play that one? Imagine! if these above 5 steps you can jump with in just one command like you press window+1 or window+2 that you do for launching your browsers, then?
it is possible just through one trick that you pin the song to the taskBar with this open source and very tiny software. It is also accessible for us. Note: Not just your favourite music!, with this tool you can also pin any folder, subfolder, any word file, text file to the taskBar which you access frequently. Download from here: http://garr.dl.sourceforge.net/project/taskbarpinner/v1.1/TaskbarPinner%20v1.1.exe Above you read my words but, below you can follow two original articles. So, for now!, it's bye from my side. Best regards to elders and warm regards to my fellow and youngers. Shyam *** Getting easier access to a Windows 7 shortcut is extremely easy: right-click, select "Pin to taskbar", and an icon will pop up on your taskbar, ready for immediate use. Right-click a file, though -- or a folder, a drive, a Control Panel applet or just about anything else -- and you’ll find no "Pin" option. There are various manual workarounds you can apply, but your life will be much simpler if you grab a copy of Taskbar Pinner, which allows you to fill the taskbar with just about anything you like. The program arrives as a tiny (236KB) download. Unzip this and launch either the 32 or 64-bit Taskbar Pinner, depending on your version of Windows. (Or if you’re not sure, just pick one, and the program will tell you if you need to use the other.) The Taskbar Pinner interface looks much like a regular Windows 7 dialog, and it’s very straightforward. You have four options -- "Pin a File", "Pin a Folder", "Pin a Shell Location" and "Pin a Library" -- and all you have to do is click one, choose whatever it is you’d like to pin, and you’re done. Probably the most interesting option here is "Pin a Shell Location", as this gives you access to all kinds of system features (not just your own folders). So you can pin Control Panel applets, Windows Help, the Recycle Bin, Windows Search, the Run box and more. Whatever you select can be removed in the usual way, just by right-clicking and selecting the "Unpin" option. And if you think you’ll use Taskbar Pinner a lot, then checking the "Explorer context menu" allows you to access it from Explorer, or the desktop, without needing to manually launch the program first. To pin a file, folder or drive to the taskbar, say, you’d just right-click them, select "Pin with Taskbar" and the shortcut will be added right away. Photo Credit: valdis torms/Shutterstock *** Pin files, folders, libraries and more to the Windows 7 taskbar Right-click a shortcut in Windows 7, click "Pin to taskbar" and it'll be copied to the taskbar, for easier access in future: great. Right click a folder, though - or a file, a library, a Control Panel applet and more - and you'll find no such option. There are various manual workarounds you can try, but an easier solution is just to use TaskbarPinner, which allows you to pin just about anything you like. The program arrives as a tiny download (236KB), just unzip this and launch the right file for you (even at this size, there are both 32 and 64-bit versions included). The TaskbarPinner interface looks very much like a regular Windows 7 dialog, and it's very straightforward. You have four options - "Pin a File", "Pin a Folder", "Pin a Shell Location" and "Pin a Library" - and all you have to do is click one, choose whatever it is you'd like to pin, and you're done. (As usual, right-click and select "Unpin..." to remove anything later.) Probably the most interesting option here is "Pin a Shell Location", as this gives you access to all kinds of system features (not just your own folders). So you can pin Control Panel applets, Windows Help, the Recycle Bin, Windows Search, the Run box and more. And if you really like the program, then checking the "Explorer context menu" allows you to access it from Explorer, or the desktop. To pin a file, folder or drive to the taskbar, say, you'd just right-click them, select "Pin with Taskbar" and it'll be added right away. Verdict: TaskbarPinner is an excellent tool which makes it easy to access just about any system resource from your Windows 7 taskbar Register at the dedicated AccessIndia list for discussing accessibility of mobile phones / Tabs on: http://mail.accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/mobile.accessindia_accessindia.org.in Search for old postings at: http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/ To unsubscribe send a message to accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in with the subject unsubscribe. To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please visit the list home page at http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in Disclaimer: 1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity; 2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent through this mailing list..