


Head to: “ HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Advanced“.In which case, there is a way to do it by… Of course, there will be those out there that have enjoyed the feature that will likely want it back. It can sometimes throw you off and completely put a stop to the zone you might have been in. So many times have we accidentally triggered the feature as we quickly bounce between windows working at a fast pace. We prefer to keep our busy environments busy since we rely on surrounding ourselves with data as we create new content. It isn’t a surprise because we, ourselves, actually disable the option by default on most of our machines. Microsoft has determined that the feature just was popular enough and has removed it from this month’s preview release of the operating system, which will likely roll out to the public sometime early next year. Which then had to one by one restore all of their windows back to where they were (assuming they didn’t know that they could reverse the action if they shook the same window soon after the initial act). If they did, they likely did it by accident.

Problem is, most people never really made use of the feature. At least, it sounds like an interesting idea in theory. It’s a great feature if you keep a busy environment and just need to push everything away to focus on a single task quickly. You did so by grabbing the title bar (top ribbon) of a window with your mouse and shaking it back and forth causing everything else to drop down into the taskbar. It gave a user the ability to minimize everything on their desktop, keeping a single window of their choice open. Shake to Minimize is an option within windows that first landed with Windows 7.
