Is there a way to highlight websites that require frequent access in favorites so that they can be quickly called in the future?
Favorites is believed to be one of the essential ways for anyone to surf the Internet. Every time I surf the Internet, I always add some sites that I am interested in to my favorites. When I want to quickly access a specific site in the future, however, it is found that the content in the favorites folder is dense and the specific site has already been "Drowned". Is there a way to highlight the sites that you need to visit frequently in the favorites folder, so that you can call it quickly in the future? In fact, it is very easy. You only need to make the following settings before you add the target site to your favorites:
Open the Le browser window, click the "Tools" and "lnternet options" commands, click the "advanced" tab in the subsequent settings window, and on the tab page shown in figure 1, select the "enable personalized favorites menu" item in the "Browse" setting item, and click "OK" to exit the setting window.
Close the IE window, restart it, and click the "favorites" menu again to see the changes-all recently visited sites are "run" and displayed in front of the favorites. In the future, you only need to pay attention to the content at the beginning of the "favorites" to quickly find frequently accessed site addresses.
In addition, if you have too many site addresses in your IE favorites, it is difficult to quickly locate a specific site. You can sort the favorites in alphabetical order to quickly locate the site.
The specific operation is: Open the registry editing window and find the branch HKEY_CURRENT_USER softwaremicrosoft windowscur1_version
Explorermenuorder; check the "menuorder" primary key to see if it has the "favorities" option below. If so, you can select it and right-click it, run the "delete" command in the shortcut menu to delete the "favorities" option, and restart the system. After opening the favorites folder, you will find the favorite site, it is automatically sorted in alphabetical order.