Sending a Win7 Right-Click Menu to Add a Common Location

  
Everyone often creates shortcuts for commonly used applications, folders, or documents on the desktop for easy access. In Win7, just right click on the icon of the app, folder or document and select "Send to - Desktop Shortcut". In addition, in the "Send To" menu, we can also see multiple destinations such as mail recipients, document libraries, and so on. In fact, the right button of the Win7 system can be sent to the menu to have more target positions to use, but we need to secretly "strengthen" or move hands and feet. The secret meaning of "satisfaction" is that when you right click on the icon, hold down the Shift key on the keyboard
, then open the "send to" menu, and see, the options in the menu have increased a lot.

Shove the shift key and right click

Can't use so many options? Always forget to press the Shift key? Ok, then send it to your hands and feet and just add the position you need. First, just open a folder, type "shell:sendto" in the address bar, and press Enter to open the "Send To" folder.

Open in the folder address bar
shell:sendto


Open the "Send to" folder

What I see here is a shortcut to all the options in the "Send To" menu. We just need to copy the shortcuts for our favorite items here. For example, if you often save the data to the D drive, you can put the local disk D into the "send to" menu. Right-click Local Disk D and choose Create Shortcut.

Create a shortcut for the target location

Copy a shortcut to "Local Disk D" on the desktop and paste it into the "sendto" folder.

Paste location shortcuts into the "send to" folder


Add more locations to the options

Complete above After all settings, just right click on a file and send it to the menu. The option "Local Disk D-Shortcut" will appear.

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