Right-click an empty space on your taskbar. Step 2: Hover over Toolbars and select New toolbar... Step 3: In the dialog box that appears, paste the following path and hit Enter: %appdata%\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\Quick Launch Step 4: Click Select Folder .

If you used Windows 98, XP, or Vista, you likely have muscle memory for that tiny strip of icons just to the right of the Start button. It held your "Show Desktop" shortcut, a single-click for Internet Explorer, and maybe a folder you were obsessively organizing.

The Quick Launch toolbar kept launching and window management . Your launcher sat in one zone; your open windows sat in another. It was beautiful chaos. How to resurrect the Quick Launch toolbar (Windows 10 & 11) Good news: Microsoft left the code in the operating system. You can bring it back in 60 seconds.

If you hate it, just right-click the taskbar, go to Toolbars, and uncheck "Quick Launch." No harm done. But if you love it… welcome back to 2003. Your CRT monitor misses you. Do you still use the Quick Launch toolbar? Or have you found a modern alternative? Let me know in the comments below.

Remember the late 90s and early 2000s? The sound of a dial-up modem, the crackle of a CRT monitor warming up, and the crisp, efficient click of the Quick Launch toolbar .

Then, Windows 7 introduced "Pin to Taskbar," and Microsoft quietly buried the Quick Launch feature. But here’s the secret: And for power users, it’s still the fastest way to work. What exactly was the Quick Launch toolbar? Think of it as the "prehistoric pinning" feature. Unlike modern taskbar icons (which combine launching the app and managing open windows), Quick Launch was purely a launcher. One click opened the program. No merging, no previews—just raw speed.

Boom. The old Quick Launch toolbar appears on your taskbar, complete with that retro folder icon.

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