Windows XP features a redesigned user interface with a new visual style, a
less cluttered desktop, and built-in desktop cleanup features. Window
layout has also been changed for Windows XP and, as in the Control Panel,
emphasizes task presentation. The Start menu has been redesigned. The
left half of the new Start menu includes the most frequently used icons. As
you use your computer, the icons in this area are changed and rearranged
depending on your computer usage patterns. If you wish to keep one of the
icons permanently in its location, right-click the icon and click Pin to Start
menu.
To access all the programs installed on the computer, click All Programs at
the bottom of the Start menu. The right half of the new Start menu
contains useful icons for accessing your files, configuring the computer, and
finding information and assistance. The Dell Solution Center icon opens a
portal to services and application programs installed on your Dell computer.
If you wish, you may change the appearance of the Start menu, desktop and
windows, or Control Panel layout to that of earlier Windows operating
systems. These classic view options are independent of each other.
You can easily switch back and forth between the new Control Panel
category view and the classic icon view by clicking Switch to Classic View or
Switch to Category View in the upper left area of the Control Panel
window. This can be handy if you would like to take advantage of the new,
task-oriented features of the Windows XP Control Panel, but you are
accustomed to performing a particular task with the icon-oriented classic
Control Panel.
To change the appearance of the Start menu to the classic view:
Right click the empty area on the task bar.
Click Properties.
Click the Start Menu tab.
Select Classic Start Menu and click OK.
If you prefer the classic window and button appearance, perform the
following steps:
Right-click anywhere on the main desktop screen and click Properties.
Click the Appearance tab.
From the Windows and buttons dropdown box, select Windows
Classic style.
To customize color, font, and other classic desktop options, click
Advanced.
When you have completed your appearance selections, click OK.
Another feature of Windows XP is the Desktop Cleanup Wizard. The
wizard runs 7 days after you first start your computer and every 60 days after
that. The Desktop Cleanup Wizard first opens a dialog box informing you
that there are unused icons on the desktop and asking whether you want to
run the wizard. If you elect to run the wizard, it places unused desktop icons
in the folder.
The default for the Desktop Cleanup Wizard is on. To turn the wizard off:
Right-click anywhere on the main desktop screen and click Properties.
Select the Desktop tab and click Customize Desktop.
In the Desktop cleanup options make sure that the Run Desktop
Cleanup Wizard every 60 days box is not checked.
You can run the Desktop Cleanup Wizard anytime by following these steps:
Right-click anywhere on the main desktop screen and select
Properties.
Click the Desktop tab and click Customize Desktop.
Click Clean Desktop Now.
When the Desktop Cleanup Wizard appears, click
Next>.
In the Shortcuts list, deselect any shortcuts you want to leave on the
desktop, and then click Next>.
Click Finish to remove the shortcuts and close the wizard.
The Windows taskbar is a row of buttons that typically displays across the
bottom of the screen. The taskbar includes the Start menu button and a
button for each open application. (The taskbar also includes the Quick
Launch icons and the notification area.) Windows XP groups multiple
instances of the same application on the taskbar. For example, if six
instances of Internet Explorer are open, each displaying a button on the
taskbar, Windows XP groups the buttons next to one another on the taskbar.
If space becomes an issue on the taskbar, Windows XP consolidates all the
Internet Explorer buttons into a single button. When clicked, that button
expands to a menu of the six Internet Explorer active sessions.
Over time, software icons tend to proliferate in the notification area, the
area in the bottom right corner of the Windows desktop. Windows XP
detects when icons in the notification area are not being accessed and hides
them. A caret, or chevron, button indicates that there are hidden icons that
can be viewed by selecting the button. You can also configure the
notification area manually by right-clicking the taskbar, selecting Properties,
then clicking Customize... in the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties
window. For example, you may choose to hide the antivirus program icon
because it is rarely accessed, but display the audio volume icon because it is
used frequently. The notification area cleanup feature is automatically
enabled when the operating system is installed, but you may disable it by
unchecking Hide inactive icons in the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties
window.