Launch a Folder or All Folders as a Separate Process
Normally when you open folders in Windows 7 via Windows Explorer, the folders are all opened in the same explorer.exe process. While this reduces memory usage, if one folder causes a crash or if Explorer hangs and you have to manually kill the process, all folders will crash and close. Plus, you may lose your desktop icons and the Taskbar. Though this should not normally occur, using many context-menu extensions, memory or hard drive problems, and other issues may cause crashes, and they may occur seemingly-randomly.
Having this all close simultaneously can be a nuisance. Thus you can open folders in a new explorer.exe process on a case-by-case basis (useful if opening a particular folder always causes a crash), or force all folders to open as a new process.
This will increase your memory usage and may require paging information to disk if you run out of real memory and must use virtual memory. Thus this tip could slow down your machine.
Case-by-case
Hold down the Shift key. Right-click a folder and select "Open in new process".
For all newly opened folders
1. Click the "Start" button, type folder options and click the "Folder Options" link that appears.
Accessing Folder Options from the Windows 7 Start button
2. When the "Folder Options" multi-tabbed dialog box appears, click the "View" tab.
3. Underneath "Advanced settings", scroll down and check "Launch folder windows in a separate process".
Forcing Windows 7 to open Explorer Folder windows in a separate process
4. Click "OK" to close the dialog box
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