& several others, with no luck. However, I did find a temporary solution: I've found a.reg file for Windows XP which ads the 'Open File Location' option to the context menu for Windows XP. I've imported this file & now I have two 'Open File Location' options in my context menu. The one is working & the other not. Now I have a choice: 1.). Location of icon for files. Discussion in 'Windows 7 Support' started by Wallythekat, Jun 6, 2013. Wallythekat Joined: Jun 3, 2013. Likes Received: 0. I make icons for Desktop files and place them in a folder in 'My Pictures' folder. Step 1.Right-click on the folder you want to customize and select “Properties”. Step 2.Under the “customize” tab, go to the “Folder icon” section, click on “Change icon” button. Step 3.Select one of the many icons shown in the list and click “OK”. These icons are located in the C: Windows system32 SHELL32.dll location.
In Windows 7, you pin a file or folder to the taskbar to have them available at a moment’s notices — well, sort of. Unfortunately, you can’t turn individual documents or folders into icons on the toolbar. But you can pin a file to the Jump List of for its associated application and pin a folder to the Windows Explorer Jump List. For example, you can pin a song to the Jump List for Windows Media Player.
- Click the Windows Explorer icon on the taskbar.You can also use Start→Documents, say, to open your Documents library.You can signup using your desktop browser and an authentic or working. Cracked spotify apk android. There are many which provide proxy networks for Chrome and Firefox extension but make sure that the one you are using offers multiple locations outside of United States.
- Navigate to the file or folder you want to pin.
- Drag the folder or document (or shortcut) to the taskbar.Windows tells you where it will pin the folder, document or shortcut.
- Release the mouse button.That’s all it takes.
- Right-click the icon for the program where you placed the file or folder.Your file or folder will appear in the Pinned pane at the top of the Jump List.To remove a pinned item from the Jump List, just hover the mouse over the item, and then click the stick pin to the right of the item. The item will fall off the Jump List.
Thanks for all the help thusfar. I've tried booting to SafeMode, but it does the same thing. I've even tried the Microsoft FixIt for 'When you run an .exe file...' & several others, with no luck. However, I did find a temporary solution: I've found a .reg file for Windows XP which ads the 'Open File Location' option to the context menu for Windows XP. I've imported this file & now I have two 'Open File Location' options in my context menu. The one is working & the other not..
Windows Icon Folder Location
Now I have a choice:
![Windows 7 Icon File Location Windows 7 Icon File Location](/uploads/1/2/4/8/124806348/165281320.png)
Windows 7 Icon File Locations
1.) Remove the original 'Open File Location' option, which was originally built into Windows 7's context menu. How do I do it???
Windows 7 Icon File Location
2.) If anyone can maybe provide me with some information on what is located in the regisry hives: SOFTWARE, SAM, ntuser.dat, DEFAULT, etc.. Then maybe I can try restoring parts in some of the hives that contain Windows Settings only. This should work, but I don't have an idea what information is located in which hives. Only Microsoft's Software Engineers would know this (I can find this out myself, but it'll take more time than reformatting my whole hard drive & re-install everything). If I can know what is located where & which keys don't contain PC-specific information (but settings only), then I would be able to restore some parts of my registry???