Post by moon125 on Nov 8, 2024 22:23:36 GMT -5
Very often, when installing a new program (especially if its functions are somehow related to the system), it adds its functions to the context menu of Windows Explorer (the menu that opens when you right-click). In the vast majority of cases, we are not asked about such a violation of our sovereign rights to the inviolability of the system's appearance.
But that's nothing. The most unpleasant thing begins when after uninstalling such a program, these already unnecessary commands remain hanging in the menu.
In such a situation, only Mmm shopify website design can help us… No, not in that sense… And not in that either. I wonder – what did you think of just now? About Lena Golubkova from the MMM commercial? About the song “Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm” by VIA Crash Test Dummies? And there was also a browser like that once …
No — all of this. Mmm is the name of a small utility for managing the Windows context menu. With its help, you can literally remove an unnecessary item from this menu in a couple of clicks and also (if necessary) return it back.
Installing Mmm is not difficult and is so fast (the installer is only 857 KB) that some users may not even notice that the program has already started working. And yet, this is really so. To verify this, just right-click on a file, shortcut or folder within Windows Explorer:
Something has changed, hasn't it? A vertical bar has appeared on the left side of the menu. At the very top of this bar there is a small dot. If you click on it, the Mmm program window will open:
As you can see, the left part of the window contains the items of the previously opened context menu, and the right part contains two folders: Hidden items and Rarely used . In order to remove an item, you just need to drag it with the mouse to one of these folders - if it is “Hidden items”, the item will disappear completely, and if “Rarely used”, it will be accessible through the corresponding item of the context menu. By the way, you can rename the folders.
In order to return a command back, you just need to open their list in the folder where it was moved and drag it back to the menu.
Here is such a program. There is also a paid version of Mmm (Mmm+) which in addition to system context menus supports programs of third-party developers. The full list of programs supported by Mmm+ can be viewed by clicking on a special advertising button in the upper right corner of the program. Unfortunately, there is no Mozilla Firefox, the context menu of which, after installing each new add-on, grows by two or three new items. And if Firefox were there...
And one more note - when installing and using this program, messages from security programs (anti-spyware, anti-viruses, firewalls...) about spy modules supposedly present in Mmm are possible. This is not true - the utility does connect to the Internet from time to time, but it does so only to check for a new version. If this worries you, prohibit its network activity in the firewall settings (for example, that's what I did .
But that's nothing. The most unpleasant thing begins when after uninstalling such a program, these already unnecessary commands remain hanging in the menu.
In such a situation, only Mmm shopify website design can help us… No, not in that sense… And not in that either. I wonder – what did you think of just now? About Lena Golubkova from the MMM commercial? About the song “Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm” by VIA Crash Test Dummies? And there was also a browser like that once …
No — all of this. Mmm is the name of a small utility for managing the Windows context menu. With its help, you can literally remove an unnecessary item from this menu in a couple of clicks and also (if necessary) return it back.
Installing Mmm is not difficult and is so fast (the installer is only 857 KB) that some users may not even notice that the program has already started working. And yet, this is really so. To verify this, just right-click on a file, shortcut or folder within Windows Explorer:
Something has changed, hasn't it? A vertical bar has appeared on the left side of the menu. At the very top of this bar there is a small dot. If you click on it, the Mmm program window will open:
As you can see, the left part of the window contains the items of the previously opened context menu, and the right part contains two folders: Hidden items and Rarely used . In order to remove an item, you just need to drag it with the mouse to one of these folders - if it is “Hidden items”, the item will disappear completely, and if “Rarely used”, it will be accessible through the corresponding item of the context menu. By the way, you can rename the folders.
In order to return a command back, you just need to open their list in the folder where it was moved and drag it back to the menu.
Here is such a program. There is also a paid version of Mmm (Mmm+) which in addition to system context menus supports programs of third-party developers. The full list of programs supported by Mmm+ can be viewed by clicking on a special advertising button in the upper right corner of the program. Unfortunately, there is no Mozilla Firefox, the context menu of which, after installing each new add-on, grows by two or three new items. And if Firefox were there...
And one more note - when installing and using this program, messages from security programs (anti-spyware, anti-viruses, firewalls...) about spy modules supposedly present in Mmm are possible. This is not true - the utility does connect to the Internet from time to time, but it does so only to check for a new version. If this worries you, prohibit its network activity in the firewall settings (for example, that's what I did .