Windows 7 watched folder
There always appears to be something making changes somewhere. As it would be a thankless task trying to keep watch over all this activity yourself, having a piece of software to help you find out what files are being created or modified could be a real time saver. All tools were tested in Windows 10 and Windows 7 bit. While performing the task of watching for a number of different actions such as file or folder create, delete, rename or change, Watch 4 Folder can alert you about the change in several different ways.
Trigger alerts can be an ordinary desktop popup window, a custom alert window that appears above the system tray, or executing another program with the changed object optionally supplied as an argument. The events can also be written to an external log file or viewed via the Live Log tab.
Press Apply and then Start on the Watch List tab to begin monitoring. The free version of Watch 4 Folder allows the monitoring of a single folder at a time. Download Watch 4 Folder. There are five editions of Disk Pulse; four paid and a restricted freeware version. Annoyingly, there is no official information about what those restrictions are.
We know from testing, there is a limit of three profiles while email notifications, database logging, and custom actions are disabled. However, file type monitoring, filters, categories, and rules are no longer disabled like they were in older versions.
Disk Pulse will watch file and folder create, modify, rename, and delete changes. Finer controls like name, size, time, and attribute changes are in the profile options. Double click a profile to enter its options. The Charts option displays a nice bar or pie chart of the changes which can be printed, saved or copied to the clipboard. Save will create a report with several different output formats available. The Wizard button offers some profile presets that are pre-configured for certain scenarios, such as monitoring for image files, newly created files, or Windows system files.
Note: A possible bug we encountered is Disk Pulse will just quit without warning if it has to deal with several thousand events in quick succession, such as when unarchiving or copying. Download Disk Pulse. This program is able to handle the real time monitoring of multiple folders at once and is a very small portable executable of just over KB. TheFolderSpy can watch for creation, deletion, attribute changes, access date, and file size changes. NET Framework 3.
TheFolderSpy has a wildcard option to include certain types of a file although only one can be applied at once. Something that users may find quite useful is a built in email option that can mail you every time an event is triggered. Obviously, this is only suitable for rare events. Any triggered events will show in the main window, optionally a log file, a system tray balloon popup, and a file can be executed including an audio file.
Download TheFolderSpy. Although the free version of Directory Monitor is still very capable, it has a huge amount of disabled functions reserved for the paid version. However, unlike Disk Pulse the restrictions are listed on the website. The restrictions include emailing, database options, sound events, printing, inactivity events, snapshots, user event monitoring, running as a service, executing programs in the background, and Growl notifications.
You can quickly add a folder for monitoring by using the text box or the browse button. The disadvantage is only new file events are monitored. To monitor more, either edit the folder or use the Add button which gives the available options when setting up a folder to watch. Multiple folders can be added to the monitor list including network shares. The folder monitoring options also offer include and exclude wildcard patterns, logging to a text file, and executing a file on an event. Does NOT mean we hurt other customers - they're free to select this feature from rightclick menu and stick with it.
GET IT?? You're welcome. As of me, being an Engineer, I will simply ram this problem head on and solve it. I rarely fail. I ran into this problem too. However I found that if I select an entire hard drive by selecting its icon in Explorer, then right-click and select the "Customize" tab, there's a an option to "Customize this folder for I suspect the problem with removable media is that it will depend on the content of the media which is re-examined every time; for removable devices it would definitely make more sense to be able to qualify this parameter by device rather than by content.
At least the above will work by session. What I did since Microsoft likes to make new OSs that are extremely annoying I went to my computer opened C: drive highlighted all folders, right clicked, then selected "properties", then selected "customize", look for "Optimize this folder for" then select "general items" and then check the box that says "apply to subfolders" That should do it. I got this to work no matter what type of folder it was documents, pictures, etc.
I hope it works for you all! OK I just figured this out, it's easy although certainly not obvious! In "computer view" select the drive with the folders you want to change. Select a folder or group of folders, right click with the mouse, choose "properties" from the drop down menu. Choose the right-hand tab "customize", choose "optimizze for documents", and check the box that says "apply this template to all subfolders" if that is what you wish to do, and hit OK.
Every folder in the directory and sub directories will now display in list view. They would have been smarter to have had list view under "general items" in my opinion. This problem was driving me crazy because on a notebook computer with a small screen, you don't wan't to see the file details all the goddam time esepcially when you want to look through dozens of folders quickly to find something.
The other thing I hate about Win 7 is how it displays folders that contain pictures -- like a little open book with pages sticking out. The XP display was much better, where folder icon was flat and you could see some of the most recent pictures displayed on the icon. One of the terrible things about software designers is their incessant need to justify their salaries by creating new crap whether it's an improvement or not.
I wanted all of my sub folders and files inside of my main folder to be in "list"view. To achieve this I opened up the main folder and pressed the ALT key. From there it is just like using windows XP.
A hidden task bar will open up. I remembered something I read about XP having a maximum number of folders for which it will "remember" the custom setting. Digging around found this link:. I have no idea how this will play in Windows 7. From "Organize" drop down menu available below the toolbar , selected "Folder and Search Options".
Select "Apply to Folders". It changed all my folders view to "Tiles". I guess you can try for other as well. Follow this article where five steps are shown to apply the same folder view to all folders and sub-folders in a HDD in Windows OS. The same procedure is applicable for your optical drive as well.
I know I'm three years late, but I wanted to say thanks anyway. I noticed this, however: For my second hard drive E: , I was able to right-click on the drive icon at root level and a Customize tab was available, thereby allowing me to set the type of folder option for all the folders on my E: drive. However, the same technique did not work for C:. No Customize tab was available, therefore, I applied the setting to each root-level folder individually. I've been "suffering" with my folders appearing in many different ways for a long, long time.
I'm not directing my frustration toward you, of course, but if Microsoft is giving the user the option of customizing the type of folder, you'd think all the related controls would be located together.
In other words, as users are setting Folder Options under the Personalization section of Control Panel, to me it seems they'd co-locate all the related controls instead of making users frustrated by wondering why the options they set are not being "globally" applied to ALL folders on their computer. This is useful, can't believe it's only now I've wanted to set all views to a particular type. Other users are correct. This doesn't work, as Folders seem to revert to their "type" depending on their contents.
I had to search hard for this - the "answer" at the start of the thread annoyed me by totally missing the point of the question, bu finding this made it all worth while. This works fine for me except where there ar NO files in the folder, only other folders. If you drop a tiny text file in then it seems OK. MS sure hate the simple life and I totally agree with Lord Koos comments on the designers.
I wish I had his restraint and and could avoid profanity. But that's ok. The real problem is we're talking about two different things which should really be two different threads:. If this is your concern, you have NOT found how to do it, and wish to just vent a little, then fine, I supposed you can post too sigh. Because of the complete absence of customization options, I surmise nothing will help THAT little situation other than one or several registry hacks.
But I have yet to find one. If you do, or you have, please please! I'm sorry, but this is NOT the solution. As soon as you open another folder with different kinds of files, it changes the view setting. People below who are saying this is the solution are clueless. Fortunately, there is a fix. Download the bat file in the link below, close all windows and apps, and run it as an administrator. What the above "solution" doesn't mention is that MS has screwed up the View settings feature by trying to make Windows "think.
So they thought we needed to be able to view different folders differently if they contain different types of content. So, with Win7, if you dump a bunch of MP3 files into a documents folder, it switches that folder's view setting to "Music". What the above linked registry hack does is it turns of this "smart" detection "feature" and makes all folders "General Items" regardless of what kinds of files they contain.
And every single day I have to waste my time changing individual folders from Large Icons view to Details view again and again and again. Is there seriously no way to see details in the root folder and display only the image files themselves as large icons? Did the brain dead parasites at the Microsoft monopoly never think of the possibility that Large Icons should ONLY apply to image files and the folders that contain them directly? Do you think your users who have more than 20 subfolders of photos need to see 6 of the 20 big brown folder icons when looking up a picture?
Or do you suppose they'd prefer to see a list of their subfolders? Oh, they can just switch the view back and forth every time using our handy drop-down menu point, click, find the thing, point, click, repeat ad nauseum. Yea, thanks for burdening millions with your time-wasting nonsense. You all belong in jail.
Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows 7 User Interface. Sign in to vote. How do you set up a default folder view of "List" for ALL the folders in Windows 7 including the optical drive?
Friday, November 6, AM. Hi, The "Apply to folders" settings apply the current view setting to all folders that are optimized for the same content as the folder you have open.
Wednesday, November 11, AM. Hi, According to my test, you can apply view settings to all folders of the same type. Here are the detailed steps: 1. Tuesday, November 10, AM. It doesn't seem to remember these settings for all the folders. I browse though some folders and go back to "Computer" and the view has changed to "titles" or "Details". And the optical drive defaults back to "details" when I enter a subfolder. I want to know too. Friday, April 9, PM. How about Network Files?
File open Thanks, John. Proposed as answer by derizion Tuesday, April 27, PM. Monday, April 26, PM. It does not work. I am quite sure you did NOT check this thoroughly. It failed to work the first time I tested it. Thursday, August 19, PM. Friday, August 20, AM. Thank you so much I was going crazy trying to figure it out! Saturday, August 28, AM. I will do the alt and get into folder options but when I look at view "apply to Folders" is disabled.
Is there another way. Thursday, September 16, PM. Friday, September 24, AM. Monday, December 6, PM. Blah-Bee , on September 11th, at pm Said:. Proposed as answer by sharepointisneedlesslycomplex Friday, December 17, AM. The five templates are called in Windows 7 : General Items Documents Pictures Music Videos When a folder is opened, Windows Explorer examines the contents to see if it can automatically determine which folder template to use to display the folder contents. THAT is what i want to know!
Friday, December 17, AM. Tuesday, January 11, PM. Wednesday, January 19, AM. Wish you well. Sunday, February 13, PM. Proposed as answer by dreamelements Friday, February 18, PM. Media Center will confirm your changes.
Only the first five media directories are shown on the screen. Scroll to see any additional folders by clicking the up or down arrows. Your video files should now appear in your Movie Library.
Depending on the amount of files you are adding, it may take a few minutes for Media Center to add and display all of them. Now you are setup to enjoy your entire movie collection from directly in Windows Media Center. Check out our previous tutorial if you need help setting up streaming media from other Windows 7 computers. Use Google Fonts in Word. Use FaceTime on Android Signal vs. Customize the Taskbar in Windows What Is svchost.
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