![]() If you use it, people complain that you use it. If you don’t use it, people complain that you don’t use it. What the target desktop environment offers is the system tray, where those making the software are supposed to place the most frequently accessed functions. Use of the systray….this is the usual “integration” problem in the target desktop environment. The icon will appear again in the systray. Then next time you need to start a session or access the NoMachine settings, you can open it from the applications menu or session shortcut on your desktop. If you don’t want to see the icon in the system tray, you can of course select ‘Quit the player’ as well, not just shut down the server. Once you’ve closed all connections, and the server isn’t active, why keep a systray icon? I’d really like to see it back to how it was, or a visible option to “Keep systray icon after last connection/window closes”.Īgain, there are more than enough icons in the average systray. We already have the start menu and desktop icons for exactly that. On top of it all it doesn’t even give any meaningful quick access (like showing a connections list, favorites, recently used), it just replicates the start menu. Once you’ve closed all connections, and the server isn’t active, why keep a systray icon? It doesn’t represent a running task or ongoing process. In some environments NX Player is basically a system fundamental, but that’s the only thing that qualifies. * It’s where you put quick access menus to tools and utilities that call for rapid and quick access to functions. * It’s where you dock running tasks that shouldn’t be hidden, but also shouldn’t be in the taskbar or foreground all the time ![]() * It’s where you put quick access to fundamental system functions Used to be I could just start a connection, do my business and close it, and NX Player was out of the way. There are already more than enough programs cluttering the systray after they finish doing their job, don’t add this to the list.
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