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Where are the Windows 10 Quick Access settings stored?
I have a large number of Win 10 computers and I want to deploy a "Pinned Folder" into user's Quick Access section of Windows Explorer using group policy.
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Where are the Windows 10 Quick Access settings stored?
I have a large number of Win 10 computers and I want to deploy a "Pinned Folder" into user's Quick Access section of Windows Explorer using group policy.
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The Quick Access items are stored in this file:
%appdata%\microsoft\windows\Recent\AutomaticDestinations\f01b4d95cf55d32a.automaticDestinations-ms
And the Microsoft Team blog covers how to deploy the setting. http://blogs.technet.com/b/supportingwindows/archive/2015/12/21/users-can-39-t-access-the-desktop-and-other-resources-through-quick-access-in-windows-10.aspx
– w32sh – 2016-03-11T07:05:28.510Perfect answer, good research. Only problem is they dump all the links into one file, so I can't manipulate it via group policy except for putting in a default one for new users. – Dom – 2016-03-16T01:07:34.283
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Thanks Dom. And it's prone to corruption from what I see in various forums. When a pinned item gets stuck, the file needs to be cleared and that resets the entire listing. http://www.winhelponline.com/blog/fix-quick-access-reset-pinned-shortcuts-stuck-not-working-windows-10/
– w32sh – 2016-03-16T04:26:25.607related: How to know “.automaticDestinations-ms” files to which app relates? and maybe Decrypt/Read/Modify “.automaticDestinations-ms” and/or “.customDestinations-ms”
– laggingreflex – 2016-08-31T17:18:03.267Looks like the file depends on OS's language... – zhekaus – 2017-01-30T10:23:10.050
It looks like these have been moved somewhere in version 1809
– Gabriel Fair – 2019-01-23T18:49:05.640
@MasterofCelebration, that's not a comment on this answer. It's discussed elsewhere: https://superuser.com/q/947292
– Mathieu K. – 2019-04-12T16:52:40.967For others having trouble finding it, it's in the roaming folder, the Recent Items
folder is the same as Recent
, the AutomaticDestinations folder won't show up in Explorer even if hidden files/folders are displayed, and the file itself is not simple text so manually editing it isn't easy. – Chris – 2019-09-25T13:46:45.773
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You can do this with group policy - here is how I do it: Create shortcuts to the shares in %USERPROFILE%\Links: GP preferences - shortcuts
Set the shortcut details: GPPref details
Then again use GP Prefs files to delete the jumplist file %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Recent\AutomaticDestinations\f01b4d95cf55d32a.automaticDestinations-ms: enter image description here
The jumplist file will recreate a moment later with the contents of the links folder
Related question: Unable to add files/folders to Quick Access on Windows 10: “Unspecified Error”
– JosiahYoder-deactive except.. – 2016-11-28T02:40:30.990