There is an object called Local Area Connection Status. It is located in Control Panel -> Network and Internet -> Network and Sharing Center in the section below the title "View your active networks." You launch it by clicking the "link" labeled "Local Area Connection." On Windows XP, this item had an icon directly in the Control Panel (which had less structure than it does now on W7) and I was able to just drag it directly into the Startup folder. On W7, this thing doesn't have an icon. The closest I have come is to drag the Network and Sharing Center icon into the Startup folder. After a fresh reboot the Network and Sharing Center does automatically open, so I click the Local Area Connection link, then I close the Network and Sharing Center. After a resume from hibernate, the Local Area Connection object is not open. So I navigate Start Menu -> All Programs -> Startup & open the Network and Sharing Center (which requires popping up the context menu & selecting Open, because the default action on this object is Expand, which means it actually does nothing when you just click or double-click on the item in the Startup menu), and manually relaunch the Local Area Connection object. I would like the Local Area Connection Status object itself directly in the Startup folder. As an alternative, I'd accept a technique that involves auto-starting something from the Task Scheduler.
In contrast to this, take a look at another similar object. Navigate to Control Panel -> Harware and Sound. In there, you can see a sub-category called Sound. That has an icon. I have dragged that icon into the Startup folder & that object does automatically launch at bootup. So it seems that the absence of an icon beside the Local Area Connection Status item in the Network and Sharing Center is what is preventing me from doing what I want.
Any ideas how to accomplish what I want?
In contrast to this, take a look at another similar object. Navigate to Control Panel -> Harware and Sound. In there, you can see a sub-category called Sound. That has an icon. I have dragged that icon into the Startup folder & that object does automatically launch at bootup. So it seems that the absence of an icon beside the Local Area Connection Status item in the Network and Sharing Center is what is preventing me from doing what I want.
Any ideas how to accomplish what I want?
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Professional 64-bitIntel Core i7-4790K Quad CPU @ 4.00 GHz2x4G DDR3 1600MHz DIMMsIntel HD Graphics 4600 on mobo; NVidia GeForc...
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- ASUS (assembled myself)
- OS
- Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
- CPU
- Intel Core i7-4790K Quad CPU @ 4.00 GHz
- Motherboard
- ASUS Z97-AR, Intel Z97 Express chipset, ATX form factor
- Memory
- 2x4G DDR3 1600MHz DIMMs
- Graphics Card(s)
- Intel HD Graphics 4600 on mobo; NVidia GeForce GT 710 PCI-E
- Sound Card
- Realtek High Definition Audio, integrated on mobo
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Dell SE2417HGX, 20.5"x11.5" viewable area; 32" Toshiba HDTV
- Screen Resolution
- 1920 x 1080 @ 60 Hz, 32-bit color depth
- Hard Drives
- Western Digital 500G SATA
Seagate 150G SATA
2 x Seagate 6T SATA
2 x Seagate 18T SATA
- PSU
- EVGA 500B (500 Watts)
- Case
- NZXT H230 mid-tower
- Cooling
- CPU fan, PSU fan, 2 case fans, NVidia fan
- Keyboard
- Perixx 513H
- Mouse
- Touch pad integrated into keyboard
- Internet Speed
- Intel Ethernet Conn(2)I218-V, on mobo, ISP=cableTV 400Mbps
- Antivirus
- Comodo
- Browser
- Firefox
- Other Info
- Ext'l DVD rec: LG HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GP10NB20 USB
Monitor conn to VideoPort via HDMI-to-VideoPort adap
Realtek ALC892 8-channel High Definition Audio CODEC featuring Crystal Sound 2
Audio conn to surr recv via 25' optical S/PDIF TOSLINK audio cable
SYSINFO: 11 NIC ports but only 1 actively conn via DHCP to ISP
ISP bundled w/ cable TV+cell, claims 400Mbps,
but really 50 million bytes/sec
I went into Windows Explorer & found at least 3 places where there are Start Menus: