Upgraded from Vista to Windows 7. All seems great except for one really annoying thing.
In Vista, XP, 98 etc., if I wanted to open a new Internet Explorer window, all I had to do was mouse over and click (w/ touchpad) over the quick launch explorer button on my taskbar. Now I can’t do that. I have to right click and scroll down to open a new window.
Not combining the taskbar buttons doesn’t work and I can’t think of anything else that will do the trick. Anyone know how to fix this?
Open the first IE window by clicking on the IE icon on the new-style taskbar. Then, to open a second window, keep shift pressed while you click on the IE icon. If your mouse has a middle-click button, try that.
Thanks. This is as helpful as the tab browsing suggestion.
What I want to know is if there is any way to fix the quick launch explorer button to open multiple windows by clicking on it with a mouse or a touchpad. Anything else is irrelevant.
If anyone knows, that would be awesome. If not, c’est la vie.
You could maybe use a batch or VB script to start a new window for you, then pin the batch/script to the task bar. Ask nicely and someone around here may write it for you
In addition, you could also drag the IE icon upwards to reveal the context menu, and then click on Internet Explorer from the menu that pops up. Each time you do this opens a new instance. This won’t require you to use the keyboard at all, and can be done with one drag and one click.
Re-reading your OP, I realize that you’re already doing that with the right-click. The drag will just replace the right-click (I find dragging much more convenient on my tablet), but it won’t do away with the need to scroll up to click Internet Explorer.
If you really want a single-click only option, you could try re-enabling the old-style Quick Launch bar. It should work exactly like it used to in Vista, but I haven’t tested it with the IE icon.
That said, I’d encourage you to embrace tabbed browsing using one of the better browsers, such as Opera (my favorite), Firefox (everyone else’s favorite) or Chrome (simple, quick, light).
Probably not quite the solution you’re looking for, but if you put a shortcut for internet explorer on the desktop, every time you double click it it will launch a new window.
In Chrome, a second iteration can be created by taking a second tab and dragging it away from the original iteration.
I don’t think the OP can be satisfied, and c’est la vie is, in fact, a good answer. Tabbed browsing was created to avoid the annoyance of a second iteration, so preserving that function is going backward for the majority of people. With so many browsers, there should be at least one that has a reasonable combo to satisfy.
Tabbed browsing if you only use tabs so that you hit control tab and alt tab is no real upgrade, so using multiple instances of a browser isn’t “going backwards”, you’re just trading the taskbar for the tab bar. In fact just throwing everything onto one tabbed bar is probably a step back in terms of interface, since Win7’s alt-tab is far more robust than just hitting control tab. It’s more useful when you can run multiple instances of a browser and group relate pages together by tabs.
In any case, shift-clicking the icon has the functionality that the user desires. Barring very unusual circumstances to throw up your hands and give up over the prospect of holding shift is very strange to me.
Firefox can also do this but Internet explorer can’t, however IE does show the tabs on the taskbar as if they were separate windows. It doesn’t help if you want to view things side by side but for navigation it’s just as good as having multiple instances.
>so using multiple instances of a browser isn’t “going backwards”, you’re just trading the taskbar for the tab bar.
No, it is going backwards. In the past you would have dozens of iexplore.exe process running instead of just one. The duplication is less efficient than having just one process running the show. The IE8 development team works with the assumption that the user will be running one process of IE8 and they built their performance model around that assumption. It will handle process and tabs and cpu scheduling on its own.
From a technical perspective, it can be an improvement - I was talking more about user interface. IE used to use a pooled resources model for seperate windows (which in theory aside from differently getting resources from the GDI would have similar effects to tabbed browsing), I guess they got away from that.
I made my own quicklaunch folder for this purpose. I like w7 but the new start bar feature is stupid. I don’t use tabbed browsing so I want all my web pages to be in their own firefox instance.
I think I want what the OP wants but for File Explorer (and a few other programs). My XP task bar was elegant, and they’ve “fixed” it for me. At the top (I have it on the right side of my monitor) I had all the quicklaunch icons, so I can bring up instances of whatever program I want with one click. No shift, no extra keys, just a shortcut. Very helpful. I hope xash’s suggestion puts things back.