My Documents folder should have my documents. (They’re almost all empty.) I’ve played a couple of Assassins Creed games – what are those folders doing in my Documents folder? There is nothing whatsoever that would cause me to look in those folders. A host of third party programs now feel empowered to clutter my Documents folder – nice programs, I love every one, but I don’t want to see folders for DisplayFusion, DVDFab, JRiver Media Center, SnagIt, or Audible. Something made other program developers follow suit. There are folders from failed Microsoft projects or now obsolete Windows features: My Games, My Library, Office Lens (nice but rarely used Android/iOS app) And who’s responsible for the other folder named “ Template”? Is that also Microsoft or somebody else? I think “ FeedbackHub” must be a Microsoft folder I’m quite sure I don’t want it. “ Custom Office Templates” – okay, I’m sure some Office junkies appreciate a folder that’s easy to find, but it’s ugly. There are some IT pros who understand the benefit of a default folder named WindowsPowerShell for scripts, but there aren’t many of them and they’re the best equipped to find that folder if it wasn’t quite so prominent. I still don’t know what “ Bluetooth Exchange folder” is for. Most of my unwanted folders are Microsoft’s fault. Microsoft is one of the offenders, with default folders used by relatively few people that appear as if by magic, stay mostly empty and unused, but reappear if you try to delete them. But some programs started putting their files into the Documents folder instead of tucking them out of sight in AppData, and it’s turned into a nasty habit.That’s where you’ll find temporary files created by the Office programs when you use them, or Outlook signatures, or your Acrobat preferences, or lots of other things. More often, though, programs store specific data for each user in a hidden folder named C:\Users\\AppData. Some program info is stored in a hidden folder named C:\ProgramData.Those folders are expressly forbidden to hold data created by the program or by the users. The files that run programs are copied to C:\Program Files or C:\Program Files (x86).Many years ago Microsoft created strict rules about where files could be placed. It holds all sorts of data – “views, shortcuts, wallpapers, screen savers, color schemes, supplementary files, dictionaries, signatures, auto-complete files, MRU lists, cookies, history, toolbars, autotext, connection settings the list could go on and on.” Your user profile includes all of these things: the special folders Documents, Pictures, Music, and Videos a section of the registry the hidden folder AppData with the unique info created behind the scenes for each user a special folder for your desktop and much more. It’s all part of a bigger concept called a User Profile, a collection of all the things about your computer that are unique to you when you log in. (You can find the folder location by right-clicking on Documents / click on Properties / click on the Location tab.) The “special” part is that you’ll be led to your files when you click on Documents, no matter where the folder has been redirected. But any or all of those folders might not be there – the “special folders” AKA “shell folders” can be redirected to other places, so your Documents folder might be redirected to the company server, or it might be redirected to a second hard drive on your computer with more space, or it might be redirected to OneDrive. You might even be able to find the special folders by browsing through your hard drive, looking in your folder under C:\Users. The special folders are deliberately made so convenient that it would never occur to you to save files anywhere else. They’re on the Start menu, they’re in the left column of File Explorer in several places, and you’ll see them when you click on This PC. There are four special folders embedded deeply in Windows so you can find them easily: Documents, Pictures, Music, and Videos. How did our Documents folders fill up with crap? Golly, I’m glad you asked. Oh, sure, I can put shortcuts in Quick Access and use a bunch of tricks to get around, but I’m shallow and easily distracted and I kind of want my Documents folder to contain, I dunno, my documents. When I’m navigating in Word or Excel, I frequently have to find Business or Personal in that list. All of the rest are WindowsCrap™, created automatically by Windows and other programs, following guidelines from Microsoft that aren’t working out well. I created exactly two of those folders – Business and Personal. You’ll see at least some of the same names in your Documents folder. This is a picture of my Documents folder. My Documents folder in Windows is a cluttered mess and there’s nothing I can do about it.
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