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Is the taskbar faked? (Clicking on something on the taskbar doesn't work?) )
If yes, see below:
Users who use Windows XP operating system have encountered such a phenomenon: when you want to switch windows in the taskbar during the operation, you suddenly find that there is no response when you click the icon in the taskbar, just like the system crashes, which is the common taskbar unresponsive in Windows XP, also known as "taskbar feigned death". We can solve it with the following methods.
Windows XP's "Advanced Text Service" includes voice, handwriting and Chinese keyboard input services, and our commonly used input methods are also classified as Advanced Text Services in Windows XP. However, some services, such as handwriting or voice features, may conflict with some software, most notably when the taskbar becomes unresponsive. For example, when we clear the document and click "OK" or turn on multiple IE quick shutdowns, the taskbar freeze is likely to occur.
In fact, not many people use the voice and handwriting functions in the advanced text service, and we can completely turn them off. Open the "Control Panel", click "Switch to Classic View", double-click "Region and Language Options", click the "Language" tab in the dialog box, then click the "Details" button, click "Language Bar" in the "Text Service and Input Language" dialog box that opens, check the "Turn off Advanced Text Service" option and save the settings.
Since the Chinese input method is also part of the advanced text service, the result after closing the service is that the input method switch bar disappears, and we can only use the shortcut key "ctrl+shift" to switch the input method.
But even if you install 10, you still can't!
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Could it be that you have pulled the dividing line between the Quick Launch and the task bar too quickly, so that you can't see the taskbar, and mistakenly think you can't see it?
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Method 1: Close all IE windows first; Only one IE window is opened; Maximize this window; Shut it off; Ok, the default in the future is maximized.
Method 2: Close all IE browser windows first, right-click the IE icon in the quick launch bar, click "Properties" in the shortcut menu that appears, the system will pop up the "Start Internet Explorer Browser Properties" dialog page, click the "Shortcut" tab, click the drop-down bar on the right side of the "Run mode(R)" of the page that appears, select "Maximize", and then press "OK" to exit. Open the Internet Explorer window, click on the link inside, then close the previously opened Internet Explorer window, leaving only this linked page, pull the border to pull the window to the entire screen, and then close the page.
From now on, you can open the Internet Explorer window and you will be able to see the maximized page directly.
Method 3: If the above method does not work, then you have to modify the computer's registry. Method:
Open the "Registry", find [Hkey Current User Software Microsoft InternetExplorer Desktop Oldkareas], then check one of the options "OldWorkAreaRectts" on the right side of the pop-up window, and delete it. Find [Hkey Current User Software Microsoft InternetExplorer Main] in the "Registry" and select "WinDos Placement" on the right side of the window to remove it. Quit the Registry, restart your computer, then open IE, maximize its window, and click the "Restore Down" button to restore the window, then click the "Maximize" button again, and finally close the IE window.
When I open IE again in the future, the window is normal.
It's in the taskbar. Look at the time there.
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