Rick Z wrote:
> I set up my Start menu with folders and subfolders and its all
> wonderfully organized with all programs in their appropriate
> categories. But sometimes I notice that some programs want to be under
> my username, some want to be under the Administrator, and some are under
> All Users. I'd like to have everything "under one roof". I've been
> using All Users and it seems to be fine but perhaps this is not the
> best? Opinions? Incidentally I sure would recommend this as a great
> way of organizing all your programs. And being able to select from a
> group of similar programs to get the job done is great. Browsing
> through "Program Files" to find the right tool for the job is insanity.
> If you haven't used it for a while you forget what each program is for.
> Their name means nothing after a while. You just have to group them
> together. Just like you group files in folders in a filing cabinet.
If you're talking about the list that pops up when you go to
Start > All Programs
then certainly it's a good idea organize those shortcuts in folders and
subfolders, particularly if you have a lot.
What you see when you click Start > All Programs is a combination of
what is in
C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs
and
C:\Documents and Settings\<your username>\Start Menu\Programs
Thus, if there are multiple users on your computer, user Bob will see a
combination of
C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs
C:\Documents and Settings\Bob\Start Menu\Programs
while user Carol will see
C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs
C:\Documents and Settings\Carol\Start Menu\Programs
So, if you want everyone to be able to easily access a program, put its
shortcut in C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Start Menu\Programs
If you want a program to appear only in Bob's Start>All Programs list,
put the shortcut in
C:\Documents and Settings\Bob\Start Menu\Programs
You shouldn't put any shortcuts
C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Start Menu\Program
unless you *only* want easy access to it in the rare event that you log
into the built-in Administrator account.
Note that these are all *shortcuts*. In general, all of the program
executables will be in C:\Program Files\appname\.
--
Lem -- MS-MVP
Apollo 11 - 40 years ago:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/apollo/40th/index.html