TaskTracker takes the Windows Explorer and turns it inside out. Say goodbye to tedious searches for files in Windows' convoluted file system.
Now you can get to the files you want to work with - and open, copy, rename, or move them - right away without having to remember where you left them.
TaskTracker is a software that helps you to manage tasks.
With TaskTracker, your files are right where you need them all the time. You may have gotten used to the Windows way of doing things, but no matter what level of Windows user you are, keeping track of your files is probably a low point in your Windows experience.
TaskTracker automatically tracks all kinds of Office documents; jpg, gif, and other image formats; mp3, wma, and other music files - and many, many other documents types you work with on a daily basis.
You can sort file types alphabetically, by frequency of use, or by most recent use - and you can sort the files of each type by dates, names, containing folders, or folder paths.
The files you last worked with will already be at the top of the list, if that is what you want. Or you can filter files according to time periods of your choosing, like yesterday, last week, or a month ago.
The longer you use TaskTracker, the more files it tracks and the more useful it becomes as the single point of access for all your document-centered Windows work.
TaskTracker is a System Tray application. You can show or hide it from the System Tray. You can leave TaskTracker running all the time, or you can close it with the Exit command (by right-clicking on the system tray icon.) You can also activate TaskTracker with a shortcut key combination. By default, this is Ctrl+Shift+T. (You can change this, by right-clicking on the TaskTracker icon in the Start menu's TaskTracker program group. In the Properties dialog, choose a new shortcut key.
Right-click on the TaskTracker windows for context menus with a wide range of file manipulation and other commands.
TaskTracker allows drag-and-drop in both directions. You can drag files that are not being tracked into TaskTracker from My Computer/Explorer. You can drag files out of TaskTracker onto your desktop, into Outlook or another Microsoft Office application, or into My Computer/Explorer. In all cases, TaskTracker copies the files - the originals are never moved. (Various copy-paste scenarios are explained in "Did You Know?".)
If you find that drag-and-drop is only copying filenames to the target location, try using TaskTracker's Copy command instead and then use the target application's Paste command.
The About box shows status information about how many files TaskTracker is tracking - and also your days of use and registration status. Use the Check for Updates link to check for newer versions of TaskTracker.
Limitations:
· 45-day trial