You can
also drag shortcuts to add them to the list, right-click unwanted items
and select Remove from this list to delete them, or drag the entries to
rearrange them.
Figure 2-7. Each region of the Start menu gets configured in a different place
Righthand column
(set in Taskbar and
Start Menu Properties)
Picture
(set in User Accounts)
Shut Down, Lock buttons
(set in Power Options)
Internet and E-mail
(set in Taskbar and
Start Menu Properties)
Pinned items
(set in Windows Explorer)
Recently opened programs
(set in Taskbar and
Start Menu Properties)
All Programs
(set in Windows Explorer)
Search field
(set in Folder Options,
Indexing Options,
and Taskbar and
Start Menu Properties)
Customize Windows Explorer | 51
Shell Tweaks
At the top of the list, you??™ll see two special entries??”Internet
and E-Mail??”that aren??™t actually ???pinned,??? but rather put in
place by special settings in the Taskbar and Start Menu window
in Control Panel. To get rid of them, right-click each
one and select Remove from this list. You can replace them
with ordinary pinned items, or use the settings designed for
this purpose by right-clicking an empty area of the Start
menu, selecting Properties, and then clicking Customize.
The pinned items list is peculiar because, unlike the All Programs folders
and the Quick Launch toolbar, the pinned items aren??™t shortcuts on
your hard disk. Rather, the pinned items are stored in the Registry (see
Chapter 3) in a format that makes them impractical to edit by hand.
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