This menu offers a handful of leftover commands that didn’t quite belong in any of the other menus.
This command, exclusively for people on a network, lets you assign a drive letter to a folder to which you’ve connected over the network. For details, see Section 5.5.3. Keyboard equivalent: Alt+T, N.
This command, also just for networked people, summons a dialog box that lets you delete a drive mapping you’ve established. Keyboard equivalent: Alt+T, D.
Synchronize, in Microsoft-ese, means, “copy files so both computers contain the identical contents.” Using the Briefcase, for example, you can ensure that your laptop and desktop computers contain the same updated files (see page 524 for details).Synchronizing also means updating the Web pages you’ve told Internet Explorer that you want to read when you’re not online, a trick described on page 354. Keyboard equivalent: Alt+T, S.
The dialog box summoned by this command lets you change several global desktop-window options. For example, you can specify that you want a new window to appear every time you double-click a folder (instead of the single-window approach); that you want one click, not two, to open a folder; and so on. You can read about these settings in detail starting on page 83. Keyboard equivalent: Alt+T, O.
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