It’s still possible but it takes a bit of extra effort.
OSK.Google has changed the steps required to pin a website to your Windows 10 taskbar. PingPlotter (Netcheck grapher - 12 years) Extreme Copy (Filexplorer add-on - 8 years)
WinPatrol Plus (System safety control - 2004) FBackup7 (automatic backup system - 1 year) Netgear Genie (Net/router monitor - end May) FB-Traffic (FritzBox routers monitoring - from May) Windows Borderless Gaming (recent - after noticing issue - 6 weeks) TaskbarActivate (avoid Taskbars gettting stuck - 11 years) I post some that will help me and hopefully we can check if there is a match!
Some I remember, some not and some are not even present in TaskManager because they run as service. This way I've caught Remote Desktop and Team Viewer when they were doing their strange side effects." Be sensitive when it will STOP happening. "When the situation with windows on top arises again. I got a sensible suggestion in one of the forums: Sometimes you can click back and forth to get the other window to come to the front (if it works, it would only have to be done a few times, 2 max). Restarting DisplayFusion fixes the issues mentioned above. It has the same result when selecting a window from one monitor and moving it to another monitor using WIN + Arrow Keys. This happens on ALL monitors and ALL task bars. But, as soon as you click it, the previous window stays on top.
You can hover over the preview to show the window. Hovering over the task bar item and selecting the window from the preview pane has the same results. It can even be moved to a separate monitor and then back to the previous one and still be behind it. Once the window has focus, you can move it around using WIN+Arrow Keys and it stays behind the other window. The speed of window switching does not effect the outcome (clicking on the task bar item immediately vs hovering over it for 5+ seconds) when submitting this thread, I was able to successfully go back and forth between Chrome and Skype 95% of the time). If your current focus on a program is a text box, it seems to work better when trying to come to the front (i.e. a program that has a separate settings window that doesn't force focus from the main program) The same program can get stuck behind itself (i.e. Microsoft programs rarely get stuck behind other programs (Windows Explorer, Skype, etc.) Non-Microsoft programs tend to have the biggest problem with staying behind other programs even after being given focus. Here's what I've noticed in trying to reproduce this issue: It rarely will let other programs come to the front. But, Chrome will stay behind Skype and it will not bring it to the front. Chrome will indicate that it has focus by having the opaque bar beneath the program on the task bar. I go to the task bar and click on Chrome. The problem is that I'll have multiple windows on a monitor and when switching between them, the window isn't always brought to the front and will stay behind the previously focused window.Īn example of this is I will have Skype focused. I'm having an issue when trying to switch between programs in Windows 10.