IE8 dead tabs
This is the second time I've had to resort to the registry to fix what i don't like in Windows 7. This time it's more of a true fix. This addresses 2 of my biggest nits with the new OS, now I can rest.
Problem: You open a new tab in IE8 and all you get is "Connecting..."
Setup: It's happening for me on: IE8 32 or 64 bit edition on 64 bit Windows 7 Enterprise
Solution: Below from David at Microsoft
To disable this feature, go to Start, type “regedit” in the search box, right click the regedit program, and choose Run as Administrator. You may be prompted to continue. In the registry editor click the arrow to expand a selection. Expand, HKEY_CURRENT_USER, then Software, Microsoft, Internet Explorer, and select Main. Check for an option on the right list named “TabProcGrowth”, if it is there double click on the item and set it to either “0” or “1” (see below for details). If it is not there create it by right clicking on the Main folder (in the left list) and selecting New, DWORD (32-bit) Value. “New Value #” should be created on the right, double click on this and set to “0” or “1” as desired (see below). Then right click on it and choose Rename, rename this to “TabProcGrowth”. Restart Internet Explorer for this to take effect.
Setting this to “0” will cause Internet Explorer to crash entirely if a tab crashes.
Setting this to “1” will allow Internet Explorer tabs to crash and recover without completely closing Internet Explorer and might be the better choice.You can find more information about this setting at the following link: https://blogs.msdn.com/askie/archive/2009/03/09/opening-a-new-tab-may-launch-a-new-process-with-internet-explorer-8-0.aspx
Windows 7 Alt-Tab Order
This has been bugging me for weeks. The absolute random order in which Windows 7 puts your windows when you're doing heavy alt-tab work between applications. It seems like most of the time it's exactly opposite of what you want; "This was not my idea!", it places the last application you worked on at the end of the list, with 20 windows open, this is a problem.
It all seems contrary to the behavior I've been used to over the years, so thanks to Google there is way of getting that original behavior back, and no I'm in no mood to research and try to learn the new, better way Windows 7 or what ever version it was introduced in wants me to us, simply for the fact that I gave it a couple months and it only brought me frustration. Thank you Michael (below) for your eloquence in starting the issue and posing the solution!
I've been nagged by a similar problem since I first installed Vista RC, and was fortunate enough to finally stumble across a solution today. I'll summarize both below.
THE PROBLEM
On Windows XP and it's predecessors (going back to 3.1, if memory serves) I use ALT+TAB to switch back-and-forth between two windows. For example, I often have two cmd.exe windows open - one for writing code (SQL, Python, batch file, etc.) and one for running the code. It's fast, easy, and by now reflexive, to quickly:
1. Edit code in one window
2. ALT+TAB to the second window
3. Run the new code, and watch it crash
4. ALT+TAB back to the first window and fix the problem
5. Repeat steps 1-4 all day longI perform this simple workflow hundreds of times per day. I can work for tens-of-minutes at a time without ever taking my hands from the keyboard. I love my mouse, but when I'm coding or writing doc, its substantially more efficient for me to keep my hands on the keyboard and ALT+TAB between a few key windows.
Since moving to Windows Vista and Windows 7, the ALT+TAB behavior has been essentially useless for me, due to the seemingly random order in which windows appear. I've read the blog post that Shaon cited, and understand (though disagree with) why the ALT-TAB list works this way now. What I can't get over, however, is that I can't simply flip/flop between the two most recent windows, regardless of how the rest of the list is ordered.
So, for the past year or two (whenever it was that Vista RC was released), I've always had at least one XP machine available on my desktop. I've done all my coding and most of my documentation on an XP computer because ALT+TAB works predictably on that platform. Now, however, I'm getting ready to upgrade my last XP machine to Windows 7 and am dreading having to battle with Windows "helping" me by shuffling around the ALT+TAB list. Hence, my finally putting in the requisite time today to find a real solution.
THE SOLUTION
Fortunately, the solution turns out to be easy. You can restore the XP-style ALT+TAB behavior - even while preserving the cool new Vista/7 Flip3D behavior - by adding the following registry value:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\AltTabSettings = 1
This gives you predictable, reliable ALT+TAB switching like XP, albeit with the loss of the cool looking big ALT+TAB icons that Vista/7 offer. Personally, I can live without the eye candy in order to work more effectively.
I credit and thank the following post for turning me on to this solution:
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Is_there_any_way_how_to_remove_desktop_item_from_Win_Tab_or_Alt_Tab_switcher_of_Windows_Vista
I hope this helps someone else, too; it made my day.
-Michael
UPDATE: 3:55 PM 3/29/2010
Make sure to make it a DWORD as seen below:

