![]() ![]() It’s A great change by Microsoft Team Cortana to make the search Better. Again with Windows 10, Microsoft has introduced the Start menu search box in the taskbar This time it’s actually integrated with Cortana. I am not sure there is much we can do about it, but we'll take a look.Start menu Search is an older Features Available from Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7. It's especially half-baked in that they still show the Pin To Start menu item everywhere (even in other instances of their own software), but have made it so it only works in Explorer. (They had similar half-baked solutions all over the shell for this kind of thing, and it sometimes/rarely works but always gets in the way of legitimate software and things users want to do.) I suspect this is Microsoft's half-baked method of making it harder for 3rd party software to pin their own shortcuts to the start menu, in the hope it will stop everything adding its own shortcut when it is installed and cluttering up the place. That is despite it being the exact same code being called in both cases. If you try the same from, say, right-clicking a file via the File Open dialog in Notepad.exe, nothing at all happens. Because, in the Win10 CU, Microsoft also seem to have changed another thing: Pin To Start now only works within Explorer.exe. except it still mysteriously does not work sometimes. It clutters up the start menu but it's better than it mysteriously not working unless you work out that you have to create the clutter by hand. exe inside the start menu, and then it pins that shortcut to top-level of the start menu. In the Windows 10 Creators Update, Microsoft seem to have "fixed" this by making Pin To Start automatically create a shortcut to the. exe under, say, Start / Programs, you could then use Pin To Start and it would succeed.Īll of this was true in both Opus and Explorer, and did not really have anything to do with Opus. If you then created a shortcut to that brand new. exe file which nothing had ever seen before and used Pin To Start on that, nothing at all would happen. Windows 10 RTM had a bug/feature where you could only Pin To Start something which already had a shortcut somewhere in the Start Menu.įor example, if you had a program that was installed and created a start menu shortcut for itself, you could right-click the same thing and Pin To Start and it would work.īut if you created a brand new. onecoreuap\shell\lib\calleridentity\calleridentity.cpp(75)\TokenBroker.dll!00007FFCDBB8011C: (caller: 00007FFCDBB7CC51) ReturnHr(2) tid(2eb4) 80070005 Access is denied. onecoreuap\shell\lib\calleridentity\calleridentity.cpp(75)\TokenBroker.dll!00007FFCDBB8011C: (caller: 00007FFCDBB7CC51) ReturnHr(1) tid(2eb4) 80070005 Access is denied. ![]() It might not be a real error, I just don't know anywhere near enough to figure it out. So I tried to debug it and do see an error, but I have no idea how to resolve it. So hopefully that means that my button syntax is correct at least. I also created a "Pin to Taskbar" button and that one does work. I click the button and again nothing happens. I figured this will work seeing it's an Opus command, and I was total wrong. So I created a button on the Context menu for the "Programs" file type group with "ContextMenu PinToStartScreen" as the command. So it's only other file managers that have a problem. I tested it from File Explorer to make sure I didn't have a system wide issue and it worked as expected. I first tried the File Explorer added context menu entry, but when I click on it nothing happens. I'm having a problem with the "Pin to Start" context menu command not working. ![]()
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