Thanks, Daniel. That helped solve the problem. Rather than using
ProcessMonitor (a tool I often use already), I simply exported the entire
Bags tree from the registry. I edited all the Music values for
SniffedFolderType to NotSpecified and imported the file back in. It was
much easier to set my one music folder back to music than to set everything
else back to NotSpecified.
This seems to be a really poorly designed function. It shouldn't take
registry hacks to set the folder type. Maybe I'll write a tool.
"Daniel Martín [MVP Windows]" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:%(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hi, Dale:
>
> Vista stores that information in a registry key:
> HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Classes\Local
> Settings\Software\Microsoft\Windows\Shell\Bags\N\Shell), value
> "SniffedFolderType". ("N" is a number representing the folder.)
> Double-click the value and modify its content to "NotSpecified".
>
> But how to know which "N" number represents your drive? Well, you may use
> Process Monitor
> (http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sys...ssmonitor.mspx).
> Filter by paths that contain "Bags" and open your disk drive. Process
> Monitor will point you to the exact registry key.
>
> --
> Regards,
> Daniel Martín
> Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
>
>
> "Dale" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> For some reason, Vista (two machines, both x86 and x64 - both Ultimate
>> versions) thinks all of the folders on all drives contain nothing but
>> media tracks. The details view for all folders shows Album Name, Artist,
>> etc.
>>
>> While I can customize the folders I have created, one at a time - or at
>> least one hierarchy at a time, I am unable to customize the view at the
>> drive level so that the change will propagate to all folders. There is
>> no Customize option at the root of the drive.
>>
>> Also, there is no customize option for folders such as Program Files.
>> And my Program Files folder doesn't contain media tracks.
>>
>> I might be losing my mind, but it seems to me I had fixed this once by
>> right-clicking in the empty area of the root of the drive and choosing
>> properties and getting a customize tab there but that certainly isn't
>> working now.
>>
>> How can I customize the root of a drive or other folders that Vista
>> doesn't think I should be accessing?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Dale
>