Windows Live Mail (or: let's just remove this vital feature for no reason)
-
If I remember correctly, Systray.exe was actually used to drive the notification area in NT 4.0. I don't think this was true on 9x.
Nope, it just provided certain icons in 9x (volume control being the most common).
-
Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF, Introducing XAML For UI) (Formerly Avalon)
Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) (Formerly Indigo, also using XAML for object initialization)
Windows Workflow Foundation (WF because WWF was trademarked, also using XAML for object initialization)
Windows CardSpace (Formerly InfoCard, used XAML for the UI and for "prettyfied" X.509 certs)
-
Are you kidding? Do you know how much those cost?
I bet you buy Macs, too.
-
No, no, no, no, no. The thing on the desk that shows pictures of cats is the user's Windows.
Surely that's their Microsoft?
-
he'd be amazed at how I could, e.g., move a window "between the two computers on my desk."
I work with some teachers who had an absolute Mind. Blown. reaction to a desktop extended between the front-of-room PC's monitor and the data projector.
Much harder for them to come to grips with that than to having the projector dedicated to a VM with its own wireless keyboard and mouse.
-
No, no, no, no, no. The thing on the desk that shows pictures of cats is the user's Windows.
Surely that's their Microsoft?
Their internet? ("I've downloaded the internet at home on my computer...")
-
You can set it up so that when you click the close button it goes to the tray rather than the taskbar. They added the option a while ago.
-
I've downloaded the internet at home on my computer
Print it out, fax it through and I'll have a look at it.
-
You can set it up so that when you click the close button it goes to the tray rather than the taskbar. They added the option a while ago.
There is no tray!!
-
-
Notification area, then, although it's been unofficially known as the system tray for a long as I can remember.