Windows 11 Start menu and taskbar to soon gain several new customization features

zohaibahd

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Something to look forward to: Many long-time Windows 10 users did not receive the Start menu overhaul in Windows 11 too well, in part because it lost many of its staple functions, including taskbar functionality. For those who gave these changes a hard thumbs-down, there's good news: several cool updates are on the horizon.

Windows 11 build 22635.3785 landed on the beta channel recently. One nice feature is the ability to drag pinned apps from the Start menu to the taskbar to pin them there instead. Previous builds only allowed pinning apps from the "All Apps" list, not the pinned section of the Start menu itself, which was an odd omission.

The new drag-and-drop functionality addresses this, though the animations still look unpolished. Hopefully, that gets smoothed out before its public release. Unfortunately, the option to pin folders directly to the taskbar is still missing. It's an admittedly niche power user feature, but having quick folder access from the taskbar is convenient for those who want it.

The devs tweaked the Start menu's "All Apps" view. A few builds ago, Microsoft tried a more modern layout for it, resembling an app drawer-like look, similar to Android. It also did away with alphabets for a cleaner look. In the more recent build, the traditional alphabetical list made a return – but arranged horizontally rather than in a vertical column like before.

It also reintroduced another Windows 10 fan favorite. The "All Apps" list now supports folders. They even expand with a slick animation reminiscent of tile folders from the previous Windows version.

There are signs that Microsoft wants to give users more control over the taskbar's crowded look. While not yet fully functional, new options under taskbar settings hint at upcoming toggles to hide the notification bell icon and trim down the system tray clock to show only the time rather than the time and date.

Windows 11's increasingly cluttered taskbar has been no stranger to criticism, with the search box, Widgets button, Teams chat, and new Copilot icon all jockeying for that limited space. It's great that Microsoft is giving users the option to reconfigure things.

Microsoft didn't list any of these features on the official changelog, so kudos to @PhantomOfEarth for sniffing them out. One interesting change it did mention was 'jump lists' for apps on pinned Start apps.

"When right-clicking on apps pinned to the Start menu, jump lists will be shown for apps that have them such as File Explorer," notes Microsoft in a blog post.

Although it's not taskbar or Start menu related, one last change adds the ability to easily share content to an Android phone straight from the Windows 11 share window via the Link to Windows app. For those constantly moving files and media between devices, it's a handy shortcut.

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So I think MS needs to bring back the ability to move the taskbar to all 4 sides of the screen to help combat OLED burn in.
 
What they need to do to stop irritating me in particular is allow the taskbar to have 2 rows of you want. That’s it. Not difficult. 2 rows. And not use that ridiculous overflow where they all disappear behind a single icon so it becomes a chore to find an app if you are busy using lots of apps at once (usually working).
 
If Microsoft just gave us the options without taking them away, I wouldn't really care what the defaults are. Just give users agency to make their own decisions. That's all I ask. No nagging about edge or Microsoft accounts. Customizable context menu. Same options for the task bar that have always been there. UI design really isn't that hard.
 
Nice article. For those of us that always hated Windows 11s tile interface one should try an app called classic Shell. This app easily changes Windows 11s interface back to Windows 10 with all the features of the windows 11 interface.

I've used open shell for years, and also use ExplorerPatcher as well with win11.. Really allows some nice tweaking of the taskbar, among other things
 
The start menu is an icon. Many people associated it with Windows itself. It was even used by the marketing department over at Microsoft as such.

It's sad that Microsoft decided to release an incomplete product (Win11) and then slowly release updates that allow users to do what they already could do in XP 23 years ago.

This, of course, is used as free marketing by Microsoft through publications like Techspot by leveraging the free time of writers that are getting bored.

What if I took 11 things, that you consider important, away from you and then slowly gave them back to you, one by one? OH, I MUST BE SUCH A GOOD PERSON WHO LISTENS TO OTHERS!
 
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It's still a mystery to me why MS decided to break what I like about Win10 and flatly refused to fix that.
In any case, I will NEVER upgrade to 11 and unless they release a proper upgrade I'll change ecosystem when W10 goes end-of-life. I hate it because I've been happily using MS since DOS but nothing lasts forever and I'll get over it.
 
Windows 7 Pro was the last great operating system! I use Win 7 and Linux Mint. Although, I do have Windows 11 Pro. Microsoft, sells you an operating system, yet they want complete control of that YOUR PAID for operating system! Horrible! Pretty soon Linux, will be just as easy to use as Windows, and Microsoft will be in big dodo!
 
The start menu is an icon. Many people associated it with Windows itself. It was even used by the marketing department over at Microsoft as such.

It's sad that Microsoft decided to release an incomplete product (Win11) and then slowly release updates that allow users to do what they already could do in XP 23 years ago.

This, of course, is used as free marketing by Microsoft through publications like Techspot by leveraging the free time of writers that are getting bored.

What if I took 11 things, that you consider important, away from you and then slowly gave them back to you, one by one? OH, I MUST BE SUCH A GOOD PERSON WHO LISTENS TO OTHERS!
Perhaps some of No Man's Sky's dev team went over to MS.....
 
Windows 7 Pro was the last great operating system! I use Win 7 and Linux Mint. Although, I do have Windows 11 Pro. Microsoft, sells you an operating system, yet they want complete control of that YOUR PAID for operating system! Horrible! Pretty soon Linux, will be just as easy to use as Windows, and Microsoft will be in big dodo!
I liked your response, and would love to agree with you completely, but...... I've been using Linux off and on for about 20 years, and while I like it, I do not see it becoming mainstream at any time. Too much crApple stuff shoved down kid's throats in schools, and too little easy to use software for the MS crowd.
 
Windows 7 Pro was the last great operating system! I use Win 7 and Linux Mint. Although, I do have Windows 11 Pro. Microsoft, sells you an operating system, yet they want complete control of that YOUR PAID for operating system! Horrible! Pretty soon Linux, will be just as easy to use as Windows, and Microsoft will be in big dodo!
Windows 7 Pro was the last great operating system! I use Win 7 and Linux Mint. Although, I do have Windows 11 Pro. Microsoft, sells you an operating system, yet they want complete control of that YOUR PAID for operating system! Horrible! Pretty soon Linux, will be just as easy to use as Windows, and Microsoft will be in big dodo!
Windows 7 Pro was the last great operating system! I use Win 7 and Linux Mint. Although, I do have Windows 11 Pro. Microsoft, sells you an operating system, yet they want complete control of that YOUR PAID for operating system! Horrible! Pretty soon Linux, will be just as easy to use as Windows, and Microsoft will be in big dodo!
Windows 7 Pro was the last great operating system! I use Win 7 and Linux Mint. Although, I do have Windows 11 Pro. Microsoft, sells you an operating system, yet they want complete control of that YOUR PAID for operating system! Horrible! Pretty soon Linux, will be just as easy to use as Windows, and Microsoft will be in big dodo!
I boot my tower into Win 11 long enough to bring up VMware and Debian 12. 90% of my activity is in Linux. My laptop is native Debian. A couple app replacements will eliminate Windows altogether.
 
Gee, Windows 10 has been completely stable for less than 2 years and they want us to move to their next alpha project. smh. I have enough problems explaining to my users that 365 is buggy. (oh how can that be?... lol)
 
I liked your response, and would love to agree with you completely, but...... I've been using Linux off and on for about 20 years, and while I like it, I do not see it becoming mainstream at any time. Too much crApple stuff shoved down kid's throats in schools, and too little easy to use software for the MS crowd.
Okay.
 
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