Separate taskbar icons for Chrome and Chrome Incognito
How can I create separate taskbar icons in Windows 7 for Google Chrome and Google Chrome's incognito mode?
I tried several solutions so far with no success.
Of course I tried doing one shortcut for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and one for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe"
but they always end with sharing the same element in the Windows taskbar.
I also tried a trick: duplicate chrome.exe
into chrome2.exe
and have these shortcuts: "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome2.exe"
, but this didn't work as well: it works temporarily, but after a reboot, it seems that both taskbar icons have merged into one.
windows-7 google-chrome taskbar shortcuts
add a comment |
How can I create separate taskbar icons in Windows 7 for Google Chrome and Google Chrome's incognito mode?
I tried several solutions so far with no success.
Of course I tried doing one shortcut for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and one for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe"
but they always end with sharing the same element in the Windows taskbar.
I also tried a trick: duplicate chrome.exe
into chrome2.exe
and have these shortcuts: "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome2.exe"
, but this didn't work as well: it works temporarily, but after a reboot, it seems that both taskbar icons have merged into one.
windows-7 google-chrome taskbar shortcuts
Did you set different icons for the two short-cuts? I have done this for other programs (egcmd
started normally and as administrator), and it works fine.
– AFH
Jun 27 '17 at 13:36
This isn't precisely what you are after, but are you aware that simply right-clicking the Chrome icon in your taskbar offers you incognito mode as a context menu option?
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:26
Yes @BradleyEvans, I already use that, but now I'm looking for a single-click solution - two nice separate taskbar icons :)
– Basj
Jun 30 '17 at 16:28
The "pinned shortcuts" icons are stored in%AppData%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
. You might try adding a new*.lnk
file there that has the properties you require, it may be that the.lnk
files kept on being generated with the same name and overriding each other.
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:31
add a comment |
How can I create separate taskbar icons in Windows 7 for Google Chrome and Google Chrome's incognito mode?
I tried several solutions so far with no success.
Of course I tried doing one shortcut for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and one for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe"
but they always end with sharing the same element in the Windows taskbar.
I also tried a trick: duplicate chrome.exe
into chrome2.exe
and have these shortcuts: "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome2.exe"
, but this didn't work as well: it works temporarily, but after a reboot, it seems that both taskbar icons have merged into one.
windows-7 google-chrome taskbar shortcuts
How can I create separate taskbar icons in Windows 7 for Google Chrome and Google Chrome's incognito mode?
I tried several solutions so far with no success.
Of course I tried doing one shortcut for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and one for "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe"
but they always end with sharing the same element in the Windows taskbar.
I also tried a trick: duplicate chrome.exe
into chrome2.exe
and have these shortcuts: "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
and "C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome2.exe"
, but this didn't work as well: it works temporarily, but after a reboot, it seems that both taskbar icons have merged into one.
windows-7 google-chrome taskbar shortcuts
windows-7 google-chrome taskbar shortcuts
edited Jun 30 '17 at 15:58
Basj
asked Jun 27 '17 at 13:29
BasjBasj
783629
783629
Did you set different icons for the two short-cuts? I have done this for other programs (egcmd
started normally and as administrator), and it works fine.
– AFH
Jun 27 '17 at 13:36
This isn't precisely what you are after, but are you aware that simply right-clicking the Chrome icon in your taskbar offers you incognito mode as a context menu option?
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:26
Yes @BradleyEvans, I already use that, but now I'm looking for a single-click solution - two nice separate taskbar icons :)
– Basj
Jun 30 '17 at 16:28
The "pinned shortcuts" icons are stored in%AppData%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
. You might try adding a new*.lnk
file there that has the properties you require, it may be that the.lnk
files kept on being generated with the same name and overriding each other.
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:31
add a comment |
Did you set different icons for the two short-cuts? I have done this for other programs (egcmd
started normally and as administrator), and it works fine.
– AFH
Jun 27 '17 at 13:36
This isn't precisely what you are after, but are you aware that simply right-clicking the Chrome icon in your taskbar offers you incognito mode as a context menu option?
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:26
Yes @BradleyEvans, I already use that, but now I'm looking for a single-click solution - two nice separate taskbar icons :)
– Basj
Jun 30 '17 at 16:28
The "pinned shortcuts" icons are stored in%AppData%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
. You might try adding a new*.lnk
file there that has the properties you require, it may be that the.lnk
files kept on being generated with the same name and overriding each other.
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:31
Did you set different icons for the two short-cuts? I have done this for other programs (eg
cmd
started normally and as administrator), and it works fine.– AFH
Jun 27 '17 at 13:36
Did you set different icons for the two short-cuts? I have done this for other programs (eg
cmd
started normally and as administrator), and it works fine.– AFH
Jun 27 '17 at 13:36
This isn't precisely what you are after, but are you aware that simply right-clicking the Chrome icon in your taskbar offers you incognito mode as a context menu option?
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:26
This isn't precisely what you are after, but are you aware that simply right-clicking the Chrome icon in your taskbar offers you incognito mode as a context menu option?
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:26
Yes @BradleyEvans, I already use that, but now I'm looking for a single-click solution - two nice separate taskbar icons :)
– Basj
Jun 30 '17 at 16:28
Yes @BradleyEvans, I already use that, but now I'm looking for a single-click solution - two nice separate taskbar icons :)
– Basj
Jun 30 '17 at 16:28
The "pinned shortcuts" icons are stored in
%AppData%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
. You might try adding a new *.lnk
file there that has the properties you require, it may be that the .lnk
files kept on being generated with the same name and overriding each other.– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:31
The "pinned shortcuts" icons are stored in
%AppData%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
. You might try adding a new *.lnk
file there that has the properties you require, it may be that the .lnk
files kept on being generated with the same name and overriding each other.– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:31
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Windows really doesn't want to give you full access to these shortcuts (and they have good reasons). The problem is that you can't pin 2 of the same application. But what if we pin a second application to launch the first?
- Pin
Google Chrome
to the taskbar as you would normally. - Pin the
Command Prompt
to your taskbar as well. - Press -R to bring up the Run dialog, and enter the following location:
%APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
- Edit the properties of the
Command Prompt
shortcut and change the Target to:C:Windowssystem32cmd.exe /c start "" "C:Program FilesGoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
CMD /C Carries out the command specified by string and then terminates but it won't terminate until after the command has completed.
start can initiate a process without waiting for it to complete
- Change the icon to the incognito icon (browse for the Chrome executable).
- On the General tab, change the shortcut name to "Chrome Incognito" or similar.
(You need to restart the explorer process or reboot for the icon to change). - On the Shortcut tab, change the Run setting to
Minimized
.
Note: since Chrome running in incognito mode is still Chrome, it appears under the original Chrome icon, not the incognito one.
Surprisingly I'm now allowed to pin the command prompt to the taskbar again. I really did not expect that to work, since I already pinned it.
All if this is so difficult because you can't simply put any shortcut you want into the %APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
folder. From my searching, this post shows it best why. The shortcut data is written in the registry in binary.
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regularcmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show theUnpin
option?
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
|
show 3 more comments
The easiest way to achieve this would be to have two separate installations of Chrome, one Chrome stable and another Chrome Beta. You can set the --incognito
flag to any one of them and they should work fine.
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
add a comment |
Here is how I added to the taskbar an icon for Chrome with incognito that looks
like this:
- Position to the Chrome folder, usually at
C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplication
- Right-click the file
chrome.exe
and chooseSend to -> Desktop (create shortcut)
- This will create a desktop icon for Chrome
- Right-click the icon and choose
Properties
- In the Properties dialog that opens, in the Target box append
--incognito
- Still in the dialog, click
Change Icon ...
- Click another icon than the default and then click OK
- You could also optionally click on the General tab and change the shortcut text
- Click OK
- Right-click the desktop icon and choose
Pin to taskbar
- You now have the taskbar icon with the chosen icon image and where the
popup text when hovering with the cursor is as set in step 8 above.
You may also now delete the desktop icon.
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
add a comment |
Make a shortcut to %SystemRoot%System32WindowsPowerShellv1.0powershell.exe "& 'C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe' --incognito"
. Bring the incognito icon from C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
if you want to (Change Icon). Pin it to the taskbar.
This way, you can have the three different shortcuts on your taskbar.
- Windows PowerShell
- Chrome
- Chrome (incognito)
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Windows really doesn't want to give you full access to these shortcuts (and they have good reasons). The problem is that you can't pin 2 of the same application. But what if we pin a second application to launch the first?
- Pin
Google Chrome
to the taskbar as you would normally. - Pin the
Command Prompt
to your taskbar as well. - Press -R to bring up the Run dialog, and enter the following location:
%APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
- Edit the properties of the
Command Prompt
shortcut and change the Target to:C:Windowssystem32cmd.exe /c start "" "C:Program FilesGoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
CMD /C Carries out the command specified by string and then terminates but it won't terminate until after the command has completed.
start can initiate a process without waiting for it to complete
- Change the icon to the incognito icon (browse for the Chrome executable).
- On the General tab, change the shortcut name to "Chrome Incognito" or similar.
(You need to restart the explorer process or reboot for the icon to change). - On the Shortcut tab, change the Run setting to
Minimized
.
Note: since Chrome running in incognito mode is still Chrome, it appears under the original Chrome icon, not the incognito one.
Surprisingly I'm now allowed to pin the command prompt to the taskbar again. I really did not expect that to work, since I already pinned it.
All if this is so difficult because you can't simply put any shortcut you want into the %APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
folder. From my searching, this post shows it best why. The shortcut data is written in the registry in binary.
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regularcmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show theUnpin
option?
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
|
show 3 more comments
Windows really doesn't want to give you full access to these shortcuts (and they have good reasons). The problem is that you can't pin 2 of the same application. But what if we pin a second application to launch the first?
- Pin
Google Chrome
to the taskbar as you would normally. - Pin the
Command Prompt
to your taskbar as well. - Press -R to bring up the Run dialog, and enter the following location:
%APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
- Edit the properties of the
Command Prompt
shortcut and change the Target to:C:Windowssystem32cmd.exe /c start "" "C:Program FilesGoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
CMD /C Carries out the command specified by string and then terminates but it won't terminate until after the command has completed.
start can initiate a process without waiting for it to complete
- Change the icon to the incognito icon (browse for the Chrome executable).
- On the General tab, change the shortcut name to "Chrome Incognito" or similar.
(You need to restart the explorer process or reboot for the icon to change). - On the Shortcut tab, change the Run setting to
Minimized
.
Note: since Chrome running in incognito mode is still Chrome, it appears under the original Chrome icon, not the incognito one.
Surprisingly I'm now allowed to pin the command prompt to the taskbar again. I really did not expect that to work, since I already pinned it.
All if this is so difficult because you can't simply put any shortcut you want into the %APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
folder. From my searching, this post shows it best why. The shortcut data is written in the registry in binary.
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regularcmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show theUnpin
option?
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
|
show 3 more comments
Windows really doesn't want to give you full access to these shortcuts (and they have good reasons). The problem is that you can't pin 2 of the same application. But what if we pin a second application to launch the first?
- Pin
Google Chrome
to the taskbar as you would normally. - Pin the
Command Prompt
to your taskbar as well. - Press -R to bring up the Run dialog, and enter the following location:
%APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
- Edit the properties of the
Command Prompt
shortcut and change the Target to:C:Windowssystem32cmd.exe /c start "" "C:Program FilesGoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
CMD /C Carries out the command specified by string and then terminates but it won't terminate until after the command has completed.
start can initiate a process without waiting for it to complete
- Change the icon to the incognito icon (browse for the Chrome executable).
- On the General tab, change the shortcut name to "Chrome Incognito" or similar.
(You need to restart the explorer process or reboot for the icon to change). - On the Shortcut tab, change the Run setting to
Minimized
.
Note: since Chrome running in incognito mode is still Chrome, it appears under the original Chrome icon, not the incognito one.
Surprisingly I'm now allowed to pin the command prompt to the taskbar again. I really did not expect that to work, since I already pinned it.
All if this is so difficult because you can't simply put any shortcut you want into the %APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
folder. From my searching, this post shows it best why. The shortcut data is written in the registry in binary.
Windows really doesn't want to give you full access to these shortcuts (and they have good reasons). The problem is that you can't pin 2 of the same application. But what if we pin a second application to launch the first?
- Pin
Google Chrome
to the taskbar as you would normally. - Pin the
Command Prompt
to your taskbar as well. - Press -R to bring up the Run dialog, and enter the following location:
%APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
- Edit the properties of the
Command Prompt
shortcut and change the Target to:C:Windowssystem32cmd.exe /c start "" "C:Program FilesGoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe" --incognito
CMD /C Carries out the command specified by string and then terminates but it won't terminate until after the command has completed.
start can initiate a process without waiting for it to complete
- Change the icon to the incognito icon (browse for the Chrome executable).
- On the General tab, change the shortcut name to "Chrome Incognito" or similar.
(You need to restart the explorer process or reboot for the icon to change). - On the Shortcut tab, change the Run setting to
Minimized
.
Note: since Chrome running in incognito mode is still Chrome, it appears under the original Chrome icon, not the incognito one.
Surprisingly I'm now allowed to pin the command prompt to the taskbar again. I really did not expect that to work, since I already pinned it.
All if this is so difficult because you can't simply put any shortcut you want into the %APPDATA%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
folder. From my searching, this post shows it best why. The shortcut data is written in the registry in binary.
edited Jul 16 '17 at 22:56
answered Jul 5 '17 at 21:17
IanIan
782410
782410
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regularcmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show theUnpin
option?
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
|
show 3 more comments
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regularcmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show theUnpin
option?
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Thanks! It works, but it displays a short ( < 0.5 second) cmd.exe window that immediately disappears after Chrome is launched. Not a big deal, but such things can be annoying ;)
– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 22:53
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
Added step 7, seems to work pretty well.
– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:17
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regular
cmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
It was working nice @Ian, except that now every regular
cmd.exe
window ... is associated to the Chrome Incognito icon on taskbar, arghh !– Basj
Jul 6 '17 at 23:35
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show the
Unpin
option?– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I expected that to happen, but I tested it and it doesn't do that for me. Are you able to pin the Command Prompt to the taskbar, or does it show the
Unpin
option?– Ian
Jul 6 '17 at 23:45
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
I just went through it again step-by-step, and it works fine for me. I'm running Win7 Home Premium SP1. What you got?
– Ian
Jul 7 '17 at 0:07
|
show 3 more comments
The easiest way to achieve this would be to have two separate installations of Chrome, one Chrome stable and another Chrome Beta. You can set the --incognito
flag to any one of them and they should work fine.
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
add a comment |
The easiest way to achieve this would be to have two separate installations of Chrome, one Chrome stable and another Chrome Beta. You can set the --incognito
flag to any one of them and they should work fine.
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
add a comment |
The easiest way to achieve this would be to have two separate installations of Chrome, one Chrome stable and another Chrome Beta. You can set the --incognito
flag to any one of them and they should work fine.
The easiest way to achieve this would be to have two separate installations of Chrome, one Chrome stable and another Chrome Beta. You can set the --incognito
flag to any one of them and they should work fine.
answered Jun 30 '17 at 21:31
Chirag Bhatia - chirag64Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
920513
920513
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
add a comment |
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
Good idea, but this would need to reinstall the extensions twice, etc.
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:39
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
You can log into both Chrome installations using the same Google account and it should install the same extensions for both installations (if extension sync is enabled, which is the default behaviour)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:45
add a comment |
Here is how I added to the taskbar an icon for Chrome with incognito that looks
like this:
- Position to the Chrome folder, usually at
C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplication
- Right-click the file
chrome.exe
and chooseSend to -> Desktop (create shortcut)
- This will create a desktop icon for Chrome
- Right-click the icon and choose
Properties
- In the Properties dialog that opens, in the Target box append
--incognito
- Still in the dialog, click
Change Icon ...
- Click another icon than the default and then click OK
- You could also optionally click on the General tab and change the shortcut text
- Click OK
- Right-click the desktop icon and choose
Pin to taskbar
- You now have the taskbar icon with the chosen icon image and where the
popup text when hovering with the cursor is as set in step 8 above.
You may also now delete the desktop icon.
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
add a comment |
Here is how I added to the taskbar an icon for Chrome with incognito that looks
like this:
- Position to the Chrome folder, usually at
C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplication
- Right-click the file
chrome.exe
and chooseSend to -> Desktop (create shortcut)
- This will create a desktop icon for Chrome
- Right-click the icon and choose
Properties
- In the Properties dialog that opens, in the Target box append
--incognito
- Still in the dialog, click
Change Icon ...
- Click another icon than the default and then click OK
- You could also optionally click on the General tab and change the shortcut text
- Click OK
- Right-click the desktop icon and choose
Pin to taskbar
- You now have the taskbar icon with the chosen icon image and where the
popup text when hovering with the cursor is as set in step 8 above.
You may also now delete the desktop icon.
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
add a comment |
Here is how I added to the taskbar an icon for Chrome with incognito that looks
like this:
- Position to the Chrome folder, usually at
C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplication
- Right-click the file
chrome.exe
and chooseSend to -> Desktop (create shortcut)
- This will create a desktop icon for Chrome
- Right-click the icon and choose
Properties
- In the Properties dialog that opens, in the Target box append
--incognito
- Still in the dialog, click
Change Icon ...
- Click another icon than the default and then click OK
- You could also optionally click on the General tab and change the shortcut text
- Click OK
- Right-click the desktop icon and choose
Pin to taskbar
- You now have the taskbar icon with the chosen icon image and where the
popup text when hovering with the cursor is as set in step 8 above.
You may also now delete the desktop icon.
Here is how I added to the taskbar an icon for Chrome with incognito that looks
like this:
- Position to the Chrome folder, usually at
C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplication
- Right-click the file
chrome.exe
and chooseSend to -> Desktop (create shortcut)
- This will create a desktop icon for Chrome
- Right-click the icon and choose
Properties
- In the Properties dialog that opens, in the Target box append
--incognito
- Still in the dialog, click
Change Icon ...
- Click another icon than the default and then click OK
- You could also optionally click on the General tab and change the shortcut text
- Click OK
- Right-click the desktop icon and choose
Pin to taskbar
- You now have the taskbar icon with the chosen icon image and where the
popup text when hovering with the cursor is as set in step 8 above.
You may also now delete the desktop icon.
edited Jul 2 '17 at 15:40
answered Jul 1 '17 at 9:52
harrymcharrymc
259k14271573
259k14271573
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
add a comment |
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
It works during a few minutes/hours/days. And then eventually one of the 2 icons disappears again (really!). Maybe after one reboot or two. I remembered I already tried this weeks ago. And yes, again, disappeared!
– Basj
Jul 3 '17 at 22:38
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
I think this happens due to updates (that automatically happen in the background)
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 3:43
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
Oh maybe @ChiragBhatia-chirag64. How to totally disable such updates?
– Basj
Jul 4 '17 at 12:37
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
That's not something I would suggest you do actually, but if you're keen, check out these steps to disable auto-updates of Chrome.
– Chirag Bhatia - chirag64
Jul 4 '17 at 13:43
add a comment |
Make a shortcut to %SystemRoot%System32WindowsPowerShellv1.0powershell.exe "& 'C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe' --incognito"
. Bring the incognito icon from C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
if you want to (Change Icon). Pin it to the taskbar.
This way, you can have the three different shortcuts on your taskbar.
- Windows PowerShell
- Chrome
- Chrome (incognito)
add a comment |
Make a shortcut to %SystemRoot%System32WindowsPowerShellv1.0powershell.exe "& 'C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe' --incognito"
. Bring the incognito icon from C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
if you want to (Change Icon). Pin it to the taskbar.
This way, you can have the three different shortcuts on your taskbar.
- Windows PowerShell
- Chrome
- Chrome (incognito)
add a comment |
Make a shortcut to %SystemRoot%System32WindowsPowerShellv1.0powershell.exe "& 'C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe' --incognito"
. Bring the incognito icon from C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
if you want to (Change Icon). Pin it to the taskbar.
This way, you can have the three different shortcuts on your taskbar.
- Windows PowerShell
- Chrome
- Chrome (incognito)
Make a shortcut to %SystemRoot%System32WindowsPowerShellv1.0powershell.exe "& 'C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe' --incognito"
. Bring the incognito icon from C:Program Files (x86)GoogleChromeApplicationchrome.exe
if you want to (Change Icon). Pin it to the taskbar.
This way, you can have the three different shortcuts on your taskbar.
- Windows PowerShell
- Chrome
- Chrome (incognito)
answered Jan 24 at 17:15
Константин ВанКонстантин Ван
1137
1137
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Did you set different icons for the two short-cuts? I have done this for other programs (eg
cmd
started normally and as administrator), and it works fine.– AFH
Jun 27 '17 at 13:36
This isn't precisely what you are after, but are you aware that simply right-clicking the Chrome icon in your taskbar offers you incognito mode as a context menu option?
– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:26
Yes @BradleyEvans, I already use that, but now I'm looking for a single-click solution - two nice separate taskbar icons :)
– Basj
Jun 30 '17 at 16:28
The "pinned shortcuts" icons are stored in
%AppData%MicrosoftInternet ExplorerQuick LaunchUser PinnedTaskBar
. You might try adding a new*.lnk
file there that has the properties you require, it may be that the.lnk
files kept on being generated with the same name and overriding each other.– Bradley Evans
Jun 30 '17 at 16:31