[quote who="basj" reply="5" id="3939024"] I checked and I believe, you can have opague color background by applying custom menu background and choose a solid color background. [/quote] D'oh! Of course that works! Thanks, -Jim
jacrowell
I've experimented a bit more--it does depend on the Start11 style. Everything works for "Windows 7", "Modern Style", "Windows 10 Style", and "Windows 11 Style", but not for the other three.
Hi Basj, [quote who="basj" reply="1" id="3938994"] Need to know you are using which Start11 menu style? [/quote] Windows App Style (I did say [e classic]:)[/e] ). [quote who="basj" reply="2" id="3938996"] Also, try turn on Mica effect [/quote] That does make it opaque--but also removes the ability to set the menu background color? Is there a way achieve both? Thanks, -Jim
I'm trying to make everything opaque, but the Start11 menu insists on being transparent. Using Start11 version 2.08, Curtains 1.19.1, Windows 10. I have "Transparency effects" disabled in Windows Settings, "Enable transparency effects" disabled in Curtains. The Start11 menu is set to "Windows App Style" and "Menu background transparency level" is set to "100% solid". Oh, and Curtains style is "Play Cyan". Any suggestions?
Please disregard this, it turns out that copy-pasting was the problem. The copy was picking up a garbage character at the end of the line...
I'm attempting to activate Curtains. I had it previously installed on this computer, but swapped in WindowBlinds for a while (just un-installed that). I get and "invalid email" error when I try to use the product key. I have 2 keys, each with 5 seats. I checked the activations on the website, one has a single activation, the other has none. I copy-pasted both the email address and the product key.
My prior work sequence: I would run "git bash" from the Windows menu & it woud start in my user directory (C:\Users\jacro); this is its default behavior. I would run cmd.exe using a shortcut so that it starts in my project directory, in this case C:\Users\jacro\devel\mlao. I have full access to this directory, because its in my user directory. I drag one onto the other and save them as a Groupy group. I start the group and note that both shells start in C:\windows\system32. I open
On up-to-date Win10 x64, I create a group containing an instance of cmd.exe and another of Git Bash. I notice that whenever I launch the group, both start in C:\windows\system32. I locate the group file (included below) and edit the WorkingDirectory setting, but this has no effect, they still both start in C:\windows\system32. [Group] GroupCount=2 GroupLeft=7 GroupTop=44 GroupRight=1360 GroupBottom=654 GroupMax=0 [GroupyEntry1] Ow