On Mon, 9 Jul 2007 14:23:24 -0400, "John" <me@myhome.net> wrote:
>Forgive a stupid question but when I navigate my C drive in Explorer (Vista
>Business), I have it set to view Details. In some folders I see the expected
>file details but in others I see what appears to be a music file type
>display without and file data like size or date.
>
>How do I stop Explorer from jumping between these two types of views? I just
>want to see all file details when navigating my C drive.
As you've discovered things are "different" under Vista compared to
what they were in prior versions of Windows. For example if you look
in Windows Explorer the C drive now sports a new Windows icon in the
left pane as decoration. I guess Microsoft's way of saying hands off,
I'm claiming the C drive or whatever is used as the root drive as it's
own. Supposedly this was done for security reasons. So now Windows
will defend this drive and doesn't like you copying files directly to
the drive (outside of folders) and may even nag if you try to access
or move files in folders on the C drive.
As far as jumping back and forth between what details are shown this
is suppose to be a "feature" in that Windows is trying to use
artificial intelligence to guess what details or display options
should be shown based on the folder contents. So if it sees a bunch of
graphics it may ignore your choice and show thumbnails, or select
another template for music files if the folder has mostly music.
Annoying for sure since again Microsoft decides what's best, not you
the end user. You can try to force a template as others have
suggested. The problem is your choice can get overridden.
>
>And why didn't this great new search system find the .xls file in that
>mysterious Compatibility folder? Is Vista really this complicated?
Being new Vista is understood that well. Again to add "security" and
force application to run without elevating their permissions Vista
attempts to fool applications by setting up junction points that are
really just phantom folders that trick application into thinking they
are accessing areas they aren't really.
Rather than going on and on how all this works, if you have the time
visit below site and both watch and hear from the horse's mouth. The
two Microsoft guys that wrote UAC (User Account Control) and more or
less try to explain why they did it, why it works, and why sometimes
it doesn't.
http://channel9.msdn.com/ShowForum.a...mID=14&TagID=9
Look for and watch the streaming video called "UAC, What, How Why"