On Wed, 12/11/2024 5:30 AM, Ed Cryer wrote:
I have my taskbar on the bottom, automatically hide mode, and it comes up whenever I move the cursor down there.
Recently whenever I load Firefox and move the cursor down, it occasionally doesn't open. But as soon as I do anything with FF (eg. minimise it or load a webpage) it returns to normal working.
This happens on three different boxes, allĀ 133.0.3 (64-bit).
All other programs seem ok.
Has anybody any idea what's amiss?
Ed
they made an excessively complicated feature.
Nobody knows for sure, what repairs the auto-descend Task bar behavior.
Only the developer who is not maintaining it, knows.
If I copied in all the associated voodoo, we'd be able to make
a pot of chicken soup. "Restart File Explorer, using Task Manager?"
Rly? what part of the chicken is that ?
There is a suggestion to fool around with the visual effects setting...
https://imgur.com/pshIc4w
Or fool around with a Notification setting that might be responsible.
How many popups is Firefox capable of ? Is there a Firefox popup
you can't even see, interfering with the Task Bar ? Is it a copy of
Explorer Patcher installed on the machine ? In the Settings Wheel,
you can edit your Notifications, to switch most of them off, but
that's not going to affect Firefox, unless Firefox itself
has hooked something Notification-affecting. Make sure Firefox
is set, so it can't put up a Notification.
There are an endless series of leverage points to consider.
and no way to test, without long baseline test procedure, that
any of them work to fix it.
One example, is windows appearing in front of, or behind, he Task Bar.
Even with the Task Bar in the locked, and raised, position. I've seen this
on occasion, and my assumption is, it gets "fixed' on a random Patch Tuesday. It was nothing I did, that improved the statistics on that one.
I would be willing to bet, on an Apple box, absolutely nothing the
user does, affects their Task Bar. The auto-descend only responds to
the mouse position (and whether the screen is in 3D gaming mode perhaps,
where you don't want any cheesy Desktop rubbish, poking through
the 3D veneer). Windows has attached a large amount of
"subsystem rubbish" to their Task Bar, making it about as
safe and reliable as the Shellex Context Right-Click menu
(which used to be Exploit City).
Paul
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