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Windows 10 Windows Explorer Remove Quick Access
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In Windows 10 how do I remove "Quick Access" altogether from the Windows Explorer navigation panel?
I do not want to add/remove items to the menu, I want to remove it outright in the similar fashion to Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration.
windows-explorer windows-10-preview
add a comment |
In Windows 10 how do I remove "Quick Access" altogether from the Windows Explorer navigation panel?
I do not want to add/remove items to the menu, I want to remove it outright in the similar fashion to Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration.
windows-explorer windows-10-preview
I've deleted my answer but can you explain what you mean by "it didn't work"? Was Quick access not affected at all by changing those settings? What if anything was left behind? I'm sure there'll be a way to get rid of it by deleting the appropriate reg keys, but I don't have the latest build yet to experiment with and moreover any workaround might break with the next build anyway. Perhaps it might be best to wait till Win10 reaches the RC stage.
– Karan
May 8 '15 at 19:09
@Karan It's still there with nothing directly underneath it, the next item is Desktop. What I want would make the Desktop item at the very top. I used Windows10_InsiderPreview_x64_EN-US_10074.iso with all the latest Windows Updates.
– John
May 10 '15 at 3:38
add a comment |
In Windows 10 how do I remove "Quick Access" altogether from the Windows Explorer navigation panel?
I do not want to add/remove items to the menu, I want to remove it outright in the similar fashion to Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration.
windows-explorer windows-10-preview
In Windows 10 how do I remove "Quick Access" altogether from the Windows Explorer navigation panel?
I do not want to add/remove items to the menu, I want to remove it outright in the similar fashion to Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration.
windows-explorer windows-10-preview
windows-explorer windows-10-preview
asked May 5 '15 at 8:45
JohnJohn
98921137
98921137
I've deleted my answer but can you explain what you mean by "it didn't work"? Was Quick access not affected at all by changing those settings? What if anything was left behind? I'm sure there'll be a way to get rid of it by deleting the appropriate reg keys, but I don't have the latest build yet to experiment with and moreover any workaround might break with the next build anyway. Perhaps it might be best to wait till Win10 reaches the RC stage.
– Karan
May 8 '15 at 19:09
@Karan It's still there with nothing directly underneath it, the next item is Desktop. What I want would make the Desktop item at the very top. I used Windows10_InsiderPreview_x64_EN-US_10074.iso with all the latest Windows Updates.
– John
May 10 '15 at 3:38
add a comment |
I've deleted my answer but can you explain what you mean by "it didn't work"? Was Quick access not affected at all by changing those settings? What if anything was left behind? I'm sure there'll be a way to get rid of it by deleting the appropriate reg keys, but I don't have the latest build yet to experiment with and moreover any workaround might break with the next build anyway. Perhaps it might be best to wait till Win10 reaches the RC stage.
– Karan
May 8 '15 at 19:09
@Karan It's still there with nothing directly underneath it, the next item is Desktop. What I want would make the Desktop item at the very top. I used Windows10_InsiderPreview_x64_EN-US_10074.iso with all the latest Windows Updates.
– John
May 10 '15 at 3:38
I've deleted my answer but can you explain what you mean by "it didn't work"? Was Quick access not affected at all by changing those settings? What if anything was left behind? I'm sure there'll be a way to get rid of it by deleting the appropriate reg keys, but I don't have the latest build yet to experiment with and moreover any workaround might break with the next build anyway. Perhaps it might be best to wait till Win10 reaches the RC stage.
– Karan
May 8 '15 at 19:09
I've deleted my answer but can you explain what you mean by "it didn't work"? Was Quick access not affected at all by changing those settings? What if anything was left behind? I'm sure there'll be a way to get rid of it by deleting the appropriate reg keys, but I don't have the latest build yet to experiment with and moreover any workaround might break with the next build anyway. Perhaps it might be best to wait till Win10 reaches the RC stage.
– Karan
May 8 '15 at 19:09
@Karan It's still there with nothing directly underneath it, the next item is Desktop. What I want would make the Desktop item at the very top. I used Windows10_InsiderPreview_x64_EN-US_10074.iso with all the latest Windows Updates.
– John
May 10 '15 at 3:38
@Karan It's still there with nothing directly underneath it, the next item is Desktop. What I want would make the Desktop item at the very top. I used Windows10_InsiderPreview_x64_EN-US_10074.iso with all the latest Windows Updates.
– John
May 10 '15 at 3:38
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
The new version of Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration supports this. Open an administrative privileged command prompt and run the executable with the parameters specified in the PDF file. Log off and log back in for the changes to take effect.
add a comment |
This question has been answered - at least worked for me, see:
http://betanews.com/2015/07/31/remove-quick-access-from-file-explorer-in-windows-10/
To hide Quick Access, open File Explorer and go to View -> Options. Under the General tab, change 'Open File Explorer to' from 'Quick access' to 'This PC'.
To remove the feature entirely, you’ll need to edit the registry. Firstly, hide Quick Access using the step above. Once that’s done, open Regedit as an administrator (press Windows key + R, type 'regedit' into the Run box and hit Enter).
Navigate to: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTCLSID{679f85cb-0220-4080-b29b-5540cc05aab6}
Expand it, and right-click ShellFolder. Select Permissions, and click the Advanced button. In the 'Advanced Security Settings for ShellFolder' box, click the 'Change' link, then click 'Advanced', click the 'Find Now' button, and in the 'Search results' box select 'Administrators'. Click OK twice, then Apply, and hit OK until the box closes.
Make sure you allow Full Control (click)
Inside 'ShellFolder', double-click 'Attributes', and change data value to 'a0600000', then click OK.
With that done, reboot your PC. When you open File Explorer next time, Quick Access should be gone.
If you decide you want the feature back, repeat the process but change the ShellFolder attributes from 'a0600000' to 'a0100000', and click OK.
1
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
add a comment |
Please see end if you would like to back up the registry before you begin, as we will be changing a registry key for this solution.
- Click on the Start Button
- Type cmd
- Right Click on 'Command Prompt'
- select 'Run as Administartor

- Then copy and paste the following into Command Prompt to turn off quick access:
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f
- Hit the enter key

- Now reboot your computer (or restart the explorer.exe process) and quick access will now be gone from file explorer in all users on Windows 10.
If at some later time you would like to return Quick Access back, repeat steps 1 to 7 except use the below code instead. This will turn Quick Access back on in file explorer in all users
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 0 /f
All these commands do is turn on and off a registry key here;

Steps how to back up registry:
- Type regedit in the search box.
- Click regedit from the search results list.
- Select Computer on the left side
- Click on the menu >File then click on >Export.
- At the Export Registry File, type a name for the backup file.
add a comment |
Not sure if it has this option as I've only briefly played with Win10, but Classic Shell is able to change a vast range of settings on Windows 7-10:
http://classicshell.net/
On Win8, I reckon this app makes the difference between having a headache and having a computer.
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
add a comment |
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
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active
oldest
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The new version of Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration supports this. Open an administrative privileged command prompt and run the executable with the parameters specified in the PDF file. Log off and log back in for the changes to take effect.
add a comment |
The new version of Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration supports this. Open an administrative privileged command prompt and run the executable with the parameters specified in the PDF file. Log off and log back in for the changes to take effect.
add a comment |
The new version of Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration supports this. Open an administrative privileged command prompt and run the executable with the parameters specified in the PDF file. Log off and log back in for the changes to take effect.
The new version of Windows Explorer Navigation Pane Configuration supports this. Open an administrative privileged command prompt and run the executable with the parameters specified in the PDF file. Log off and log back in for the changes to take effect.
edited Sep 17 '15 at 14:42
answered Sep 17 '15 at 14:34
JohnJohn
98921137
98921137
add a comment |
add a comment |
This question has been answered - at least worked for me, see:
http://betanews.com/2015/07/31/remove-quick-access-from-file-explorer-in-windows-10/
To hide Quick Access, open File Explorer and go to View -> Options. Under the General tab, change 'Open File Explorer to' from 'Quick access' to 'This PC'.
To remove the feature entirely, you’ll need to edit the registry. Firstly, hide Quick Access using the step above. Once that’s done, open Regedit as an administrator (press Windows key + R, type 'regedit' into the Run box and hit Enter).
Navigate to: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTCLSID{679f85cb-0220-4080-b29b-5540cc05aab6}
Expand it, and right-click ShellFolder. Select Permissions, and click the Advanced button. In the 'Advanced Security Settings for ShellFolder' box, click the 'Change' link, then click 'Advanced', click the 'Find Now' button, and in the 'Search results' box select 'Administrators'. Click OK twice, then Apply, and hit OK until the box closes.
Make sure you allow Full Control (click)
Inside 'ShellFolder', double-click 'Attributes', and change data value to 'a0600000', then click OK.
With that done, reboot your PC. When you open File Explorer next time, Quick Access should be gone.
If you decide you want the feature back, repeat the process but change the ShellFolder attributes from 'a0600000' to 'a0100000', and click OK.
1
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
add a comment |
This question has been answered - at least worked for me, see:
http://betanews.com/2015/07/31/remove-quick-access-from-file-explorer-in-windows-10/
To hide Quick Access, open File Explorer and go to View -> Options. Under the General tab, change 'Open File Explorer to' from 'Quick access' to 'This PC'.
To remove the feature entirely, you’ll need to edit the registry. Firstly, hide Quick Access using the step above. Once that’s done, open Regedit as an administrator (press Windows key + R, type 'regedit' into the Run box and hit Enter).
Navigate to: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTCLSID{679f85cb-0220-4080-b29b-5540cc05aab6}
Expand it, and right-click ShellFolder. Select Permissions, and click the Advanced button. In the 'Advanced Security Settings for ShellFolder' box, click the 'Change' link, then click 'Advanced', click the 'Find Now' button, and in the 'Search results' box select 'Administrators'. Click OK twice, then Apply, and hit OK until the box closes.
Make sure you allow Full Control (click)
Inside 'ShellFolder', double-click 'Attributes', and change data value to 'a0600000', then click OK.
With that done, reboot your PC. When you open File Explorer next time, Quick Access should be gone.
If you decide you want the feature back, repeat the process but change the ShellFolder attributes from 'a0600000' to 'a0100000', and click OK.
1
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
add a comment |
This question has been answered - at least worked for me, see:
http://betanews.com/2015/07/31/remove-quick-access-from-file-explorer-in-windows-10/
To hide Quick Access, open File Explorer and go to View -> Options. Under the General tab, change 'Open File Explorer to' from 'Quick access' to 'This PC'.
To remove the feature entirely, you’ll need to edit the registry. Firstly, hide Quick Access using the step above. Once that’s done, open Regedit as an administrator (press Windows key + R, type 'regedit' into the Run box and hit Enter).
Navigate to: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTCLSID{679f85cb-0220-4080-b29b-5540cc05aab6}
Expand it, and right-click ShellFolder. Select Permissions, and click the Advanced button. In the 'Advanced Security Settings for ShellFolder' box, click the 'Change' link, then click 'Advanced', click the 'Find Now' button, and in the 'Search results' box select 'Administrators'. Click OK twice, then Apply, and hit OK until the box closes.
Make sure you allow Full Control (click)
Inside 'ShellFolder', double-click 'Attributes', and change data value to 'a0600000', then click OK.
With that done, reboot your PC. When you open File Explorer next time, Quick Access should be gone.
If you decide you want the feature back, repeat the process but change the ShellFolder attributes from 'a0600000' to 'a0100000', and click OK.
This question has been answered - at least worked for me, see:
http://betanews.com/2015/07/31/remove-quick-access-from-file-explorer-in-windows-10/
To hide Quick Access, open File Explorer and go to View -> Options. Under the General tab, change 'Open File Explorer to' from 'Quick access' to 'This PC'.
To remove the feature entirely, you’ll need to edit the registry. Firstly, hide Quick Access using the step above. Once that’s done, open Regedit as an administrator (press Windows key + R, type 'regedit' into the Run box and hit Enter).
Navigate to: HKEY_CLASSES_ROOTCLSID{679f85cb-0220-4080-b29b-5540cc05aab6}
Expand it, and right-click ShellFolder. Select Permissions, and click the Advanced button. In the 'Advanced Security Settings for ShellFolder' box, click the 'Change' link, then click 'Advanced', click the 'Find Now' button, and in the 'Search results' box select 'Administrators'. Click OK twice, then Apply, and hit OK until the box closes.
Make sure you allow Full Control (click)
Inside 'ShellFolder', double-click 'Attributes', and change data value to 'a0600000', then click OK.
With that done, reboot your PC. When you open File Explorer next time, Quick Access should be gone.
If you decide you want the feature back, repeat the process but change the ShellFolder attributes from 'a0600000' to 'a0100000', and click OK.
answered Apr 27 '16 at 22:53
jonrichcojonrichco
314
314
1
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
add a comment |
1
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
1
1
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
You answer is not very readable. Please can you reformat it to use numbering/bullets/etc. See Markdown help.
– DavidPostill♦
Apr 27 '16 at 23:32
add a comment |
Please see end if you would like to back up the registry before you begin, as we will be changing a registry key for this solution.
- Click on the Start Button
- Type cmd
- Right Click on 'Command Prompt'
- select 'Run as Administartor

- Then copy and paste the following into Command Prompt to turn off quick access:
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f
- Hit the enter key

- Now reboot your computer (or restart the explorer.exe process) and quick access will now be gone from file explorer in all users on Windows 10.
If at some later time you would like to return Quick Access back, repeat steps 1 to 7 except use the below code instead. This will turn Quick Access back on in file explorer in all users
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 0 /f
All these commands do is turn on and off a registry key here;

Steps how to back up registry:
- Type regedit in the search box.
- Click regedit from the search results list.
- Select Computer on the left side
- Click on the menu >File then click on >Export.
- At the Export Registry File, type a name for the backup file.
add a comment |
Please see end if you would like to back up the registry before you begin, as we will be changing a registry key for this solution.
- Click on the Start Button
- Type cmd
- Right Click on 'Command Prompt'
- select 'Run as Administartor

- Then copy and paste the following into Command Prompt to turn off quick access:
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f
- Hit the enter key

- Now reboot your computer (or restart the explorer.exe process) and quick access will now be gone from file explorer in all users on Windows 10.
If at some later time you would like to return Quick Access back, repeat steps 1 to 7 except use the below code instead. This will turn Quick Access back on in file explorer in all users
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 0 /f
All these commands do is turn on and off a registry key here;

Steps how to back up registry:
- Type regedit in the search box.
- Click regedit from the search results list.
- Select Computer on the left side
- Click on the menu >File then click on >Export.
- At the Export Registry File, type a name for the backup file.
add a comment |
Please see end if you would like to back up the registry before you begin, as we will be changing a registry key for this solution.
- Click on the Start Button
- Type cmd
- Right Click on 'Command Prompt'
- select 'Run as Administartor

- Then copy and paste the following into Command Prompt to turn off quick access:
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f
- Hit the enter key

- Now reboot your computer (or restart the explorer.exe process) and quick access will now be gone from file explorer in all users on Windows 10.
If at some later time you would like to return Quick Access back, repeat steps 1 to 7 except use the below code instead. This will turn Quick Access back on in file explorer in all users
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 0 /f
All these commands do is turn on and off a registry key here;

Steps how to back up registry:
- Type regedit in the search box.
- Click regedit from the search results list.
- Select Computer on the left side
- Click on the menu >File then click on >Export.
- At the Export Registry File, type a name for the backup file.
Please see end if you would like to back up the registry before you begin, as we will be changing a registry key for this solution.
- Click on the Start Button
- Type cmd
- Right Click on 'Command Prompt'
- select 'Run as Administartor

- Then copy and paste the following into Command Prompt to turn off quick access:
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 1 /f
- Hit the enter key

- Now reboot your computer (or restart the explorer.exe process) and quick access will now be gone from file explorer in all users on Windows 10.
If at some later time you would like to return Quick Access back, repeat steps 1 to 7 except use the below code instead. This will turn Quick Access back on in file explorer in all users
REG ADD
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionExplorer
/v HubMode /t REG_DWORD /d 0 /f
All these commands do is turn on and off a registry key here;

Steps how to back up registry:
- Type regedit in the search box.
- Click regedit from the search results list.
- Select Computer on the left side
- Click on the menu >File then click on >Export.
- At the Export Registry File, type a name for the backup file.
answered 5 hours ago
Kass MonkKass Monk
113
113
add a comment |
add a comment |
Not sure if it has this option as I've only briefly played with Win10, but Classic Shell is able to change a vast range of settings on Windows 7-10:
http://classicshell.net/
On Win8, I reckon this app makes the difference between having a headache and having a computer.
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
add a comment |
Not sure if it has this option as I've only briefly played with Win10, but Classic Shell is able to change a vast range of settings on Windows 7-10:
http://classicshell.net/
On Win8, I reckon this app makes the difference between having a headache and having a computer.
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
add a comment |
Not sure if it has this option as I've only briefly played with Win10, but Classic Shell is able to change a vast range of settings on Windows 7-10:
http://classicshell.net/
On Win8, I reckon this app makes the difference between having a headache and having a computer.
Not sure if it has this option as I've only briefly played with Win10, but Classic Shell is able to change a vast range of settings on Windows 7-10:
http://classicshell.net/
On Win8, I reckon this app makes the difference between having a headache and having a computer.
answered May 5 '15 at 14:03
IanRIanR
1584
1584
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
add a comment |
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
This is just a vague guess at best and would have been better off as a comment. If you can confirm that Classic Shell can actually do what the OP wants then I will gladly remove my negative vote.
– Karan
May 6 '15 at 0:34
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
I think it is quite reasonable to make a suggestion which may benefit the OP. I DID check the documentation before posting, and it looks like it might do this. If I were posting BS you would be within your rights to post neg FB, but I am not. Your reaction seems to be pure vindictiveness.
– IanR
May 7 '15 at 19:29
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
You can certainly make a suggestion but you're yourself unsure whether your suggestion is valid. Can you point out where in the docs it says Classic Shell can disable Quick Access? If you can provide some proof or better still a screenshot of it working, I'll definitely upvote your answer. Edit: Just saw you added a few sentences to your comment. For the record it's not vindictiveness because I don't know you from any Tom, Dick or Harry and I lose rep too when downvoting. Provide the proof that your answer (which BTW I never said was total BS) works and get the well-deserved upvote, simple.
– Karan
May 7 '15 at 19:56
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
I can confirm that Classic Shell has this option. It's in the Context Menu section. Though, tests seem to indicate that this setting may not work properly on Windows 10. Since My Win10 install was bashed-around a bit from software testing I wanted to wait until I could confirm this on a fresh install. They may fix this in due course.
– IanR
May 13 '15 at 21:33
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
So, I make a suggestion based on experience. An admin punishes me for making what he considers to be a guess. I then show that the information I am giving is in the software manual. Further testing (which involved me in a lot of additional time at my own expense) shows that the option might not work correctly, but that is hardly MY fault. I gave authentic information, and that is what matters. The punishment still stands. Sod that for a laugh, if I were being paid to give advice this would still be bad enough. As it is, foot-shooting exercise since I'm outa here.
– IanR
Jul 19 '15 at 21:54
add a comment |
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I've deleted my answer but can you explain what you mean by "it didn't work"? Was Quick access not affected at all by changing those settings? What if anything was left behind? I'm sure there'll be a way to get rid of it by deleting the appropriate reg keys, but I don't have the latest build yet to experiment with and moreover any workaround might break with the next build anyway. Perhaps it might be best to wait till Win10 reaches the RC stage.
– Karan
May 8 '15 at 19:09
@Karan It's still there with nothing directly underneath it, the next item is Desktop. What I want would make the Desktop item at the very top. I used Windows10_InsiderPreview_x64_EN-US_10074.iso with all the latest Windows Updates.
– John
May 10 '15 at 3:38