Showing results for September 2003 - Page 4 of 4 - The Old New Thing

Sep 3, 2003
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Why is there no programmatic access to the Start menu pin list?

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

We learned our lesson the hard way. In Windows 95, we gave programmatic access to the Start menu "Fast items" list - the items that appear at the top of the Start menu above the Programs list. This area was meant for the user to customize with their favorite links, but programs quickly saw th...

History
Sep 2, 2003
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The World Adult Kickball Association

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

"People just want to come out and have fun," Smith said. "A lot of the sports leagues out there, unless you're die-hard, unless you're so serious, people end up getting left out," he said. Not so with kickball. "People haven't done it since grade school, so it's not like people have bee...

Non-Computer
Sep 2, 2003
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Determining whether your window is covered

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

The method described in the previous coding blog entry works great if you are using the window visibility state to control painting, since you're using the paint system itself to do the heavy lifting for you. To obtain this information outside of the paint loop, use and . The HDC that...

Code
Sep 1, 2003
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Even the trees are falling for the media's lies

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

The White House is doing some renovating of its own (NYT, free registration required), in order to refurbish a section of the lawn that is used by television reporters so they can stand there with a nice picture of the White House behind them. But that's not why I found this story interesting. Go about halfway down the article: "The light and ...

Non-Computer
Sep 1, 2003
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Suburbs make you fat, researchers conclude

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

Researchers have determined that living in the suburbs makes you fat. That and all the super-sized value meals. Speaking of super-sizing your value meal: people are tearing down their McMansions in order to build... a bigger McMansion (WSJ, paid registration required, sorry).

Non-Computer
Sep 1, 2003
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The default answer to every dialog box is "Cancel"

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

The problem with displaying UI is that people will take every opportunity to ignore it. This story of how people deal with virus warning dialogs (via Don Browning) is a template for how users treat any unexpected dialog: They try to get rid of it. We see this time and time again. If y...

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