Monday, November 7, 2016
How to Enable the God Mode in Win 7 and Why it is Overrated
How to Enable the God Mode in Win 7 and Why it is Overrated
A goofy trick has been making the rounds , which was described by Ina Fried on CNET as follows:
By creating a new folder in Windows 7 and renaming it with a certain text string at the end, users are able to have a single place to do everything from changing the look of the mouse pointer to making a new hard drive partition.
Apparently people decided to call this God Mode in Win 7 because to enable this trick you make a folder called GodMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C} and double-click on it. Now you can see
the control panel. With a slightly different view than you normally see it in.
So first off, why is this completely silly? Well, the text GodMode has nothing to do with making the trick work. You can call the folder EvilMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}and now youve discovered the magical EvilMode feature hidden in Windows!
So first off, why is this completely silly? Well, the text GodMode has nothing to do with making the trick work. You can call the folder EvilMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}and now youve discovered the magical EvilMode feature hidden in Windows!
Well, not really. What youve actually discovered are two things:
First, youve discovered a documented feature of the shell whereby filesystem folders can be easily made into namespace junctions, as described here on MSDN. Basically, any folder named will show up with just the portion visible in Explorer, and navigating into the folder will take you to the namespace root defined by the portion of the name. This isnt a user feature, its a developer feature.
The second thing youve discovered is the All Tasks folder. This is a special shell folder which is used as the source of the Control Panel search results seen in the Start menu. This folder was not designed to be browsed to directly, as the normal Control Panel folder (accessible via Start Control Panel) contains all the same items but with a custom view designed to be easier to navigate. The All Tasks folder has no custom view, so you just see the standard Explorer list view and little else.
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