![]() The source is a mess with almost no comments, but mostly if anyone wants to check the legitimacy of it. Got a little carried away making it, and changed what I was doing half way through. Some functionality uses PowerShell, but this is optional and turned off by default. Note, you must have Windows 10 November 1511 - Build 10586 or above for this to work. Let me know on GitHub if there are any issues and I'll take a look. I have released a utility and the source code to here if anyone wanted it - Ī video of the functionality can be seen here. Notice the small icon in the pic above - the Steam logo is blurred badly from the down-scaling. Microsoft isĭown-scaling some of the icons that don't provide native 24x24 icons, Most icons are designed for that resolution or higher. 32x32 is a Windows standard for icons, and.This isn't just an excuse either, I often set folder icons on many folders I regularly navigate, because it's easier and faster then reading the text labels of the folders. The faster I can visually identify the icon, the faster I can click it. Larger icons are easier for me to pick-out when rapidly selecting.Is there any way to force Windows to do this? I wouldn't mind editing the registry if I knew what key to change, but I couldn't easily spot it - if one exists at all. ![]() ![]() I'd like the small boxes (50x50) to use 32x32 icons, and the larger boxes to scale up to use as much space as is offered (even an enforced 64圆4 on the medium-sized boxes would satisfy me). At my current resolution (1680x1050), Windows 10's start menu has very large boxes, but with very tiny icons in them.ĭespite the small box size being 50x50 pixels, the icon in it is only 24x24 resolution.Īnd when you have a medium box (100x100 pixels), the icon does move to 32x32 resolution, but even that is pretty silly, considering these icons (even most of the built-in ones) have higher-resolution image sizes - often up to 128x128 or 256x256. ![]()
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