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Aero Snap Video  drmda | 09/29/09

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Windows 7 demo: Window management

Moving, resizing, and arranging windows on the screen has been one of those things we've done since the earliest days of Microsoft Windows. If you've used Windows since, oh, 1995 or so, you know the maximize, minimize, and restore buttons like the back of your hand. But those old-school tools just don't cut it with today's big monitors and high-definition resolutions. ZDNet's Ed Bott shows you a cool new set of gestures and shortcuts to help you move, resize, and arrange windows more intelligently.

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>> Ed Bott: I'm Ed Bott for ZDNet, and today I want to show you a cool new set of gestures and shortcuts that you can use in Windows 7 to move, resize, and arrange windows more intelligibly. You're probably used to using the maximize and minimize buttons in the top right corner of the window, but once you learn the new way to maximize and restore a window, you'll never touch those buttons again. Click the title bar, drag it to the top of the screen, and snap it into position. Drag it down and away to restore the window to its previous size and position. By the way, that should give you a pretty good idea of why this feature is called arrow snap. On really big wide-screen monitors, it doesn't make sense to maximize some windows. Get your web browser or your Word document to the right width, then drag the top or bottom of the window up to fill the screen vertically without changing the horizontal. One of my favorite arrow snap tricks is this one where you can arrange a window so it occupies exactly half the screen. Just grab the title bar and move it to the side of the monitor until the mouse pointer hits the edge. Release the mouse button, and you're done. Check out the animation effect as you move a window to a hot spot at the edge of the screen. It's subtle, almost subconscious, but it gives you great feedback about when to release the mouse button. Everything I've shown you so far has involved the mouse, but you can also use keyboard shortcuts for these arrow snap actions. Hold down the Windows logo key and use the left and right arrow keys to snap from side to side. Use the Windows key plus the up and down arrows to maximize, restore, and minimize a window. The only tricky keyboard shortcut is the one you use to vertically expand a window. For that, hold down the Windows logo key, plus shift, plus the up arrow. There's one common situation where I use these techniques everyday, and that's for copying files between folders. I have some files on a USB flash drive that I want to copy to my local hard drive. By arranging the two windows side by side, I can do the job quickly just dragging the files out of one window and dropping them in the other. And for the grand finale, there's arrow shake. Want to minimize every window but the one you're working with? Just click the title bar, and move it from side to side quickly at least three times. If you did it by accident, just repeat the gesture to put things back the way they were. In the next video, I'll show you how some new features in Windows 7 can help you multitask more effectively. For ZDNet, I'm Ed Bott.

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