Studies have found that people with cleaner, tidier desktops live longer. I am joking of course, but ask yourself this: is your desktop too crowded with icons? Do you ever wish for a little bit more room just to fit in a few more files? Are there files and folders doing nothing that were put there weeks ago?
If so, then this post is for you. It will present 10 free tools that can help you better organize your desktop, or at least breathe some new life into it. Some of these tools will require that you only shuffle your icons around your desktop for a better, more organized layout, while others assume that you move your icons to folders first.
Part one: tools that do you can use without moving your icons off the desktop into folders
- Fences: sort your icons within floating containers on the desktop
- SE-DesktopConstructor: map out ‘zones’ inside your wallpaper to help organize your icons
Part two: tools that can display your icons on the desktop once they are organized into folders. They also offer some drag and drop interactivity with Windows explorer.
- Dexpot: create separate virtual desktops for each category of icons
- Nimi Places: display the contents of folders in containers on the desktop
- SideSlide: display the contents of folders inside a scrolling window
- Stick: display the contents of folders as retractable tabs on the sides of your screen
- Launchbar Commander: a floating, cascading menu that can browse your folders
- FSL Launcher: tabbed launcher that can be linked to your folders
Part three: tools that can be useful to desktop icon management
- DekstopOK: save and restore your desktop icon layouts
- Diswy: show and hide desktop icons with a single click
The problem:
a busy, cluttered desktop (see image below).
This is a meant to be a typical desktop containing all manner of icons: files, shortcuts, media files, installers, etc. There is some attempt at organization; the different categories of icons are clustered together in clumps (hitherto referred to as categories), which we also believe is typical for most users.
The solution:
Part one: tools that do you can use without moving your icons off the desktop into folders
1. Fences: sort your icons within floating containers on the desktop
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Overall rating for Fences: 9/10
2. SE-DesktopConstructor: map out ‘zones’ inside your wallpaper to help organize your icons
This program simply modifies the wallpaper image to embed user-defined zones within them, that correspond to where you want your icons to be. Users can edit or change these at any time; the program does not do much more than that.
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Overall rating for SE-DesktopConstructor: 8/10
Part two: tools that require moving your icons into folders first
We assume that the whole point of keeping icons on the desktop (as opposed to moving them to folders) is to keep them within sight at all times. Thus, if it is possible for a tool to do both (move them into folders AND keep them in sight) then we considered it eligible for mention in this article.
These programs have one thing in common: they must link directly to your Windows folders, which means that any change in the folder is reflected instantly in the program itself. (As opposed to your normal launcher, where individual files or folders are merely added to the launcher).
Once you sort your desktop icons to folders, you can either keep these on the desktop or move them elsewhere, and you can either keep displaying desktop icons or opt to not display them altogether. In the screenshots below we kept the newly created folders on the desktop and opted to not display icons on the desktop at all.
3. Dexpot: create separate virtual desktops, each with it’s own collection of icons
If your icons are crowding out a single desktop, why not use many? Dexpot is a free virtual desktop app that supports multiple desktops, and is the only one as far as I know to support organizing icons into separate desktops, rather than just windows and applications.
Dexpot creates a new folder for each new virtual desktop you create (‘Desktop 2’, ‘Desktop 3’, etc, which it places in C:\Users\*username* by default). Thus all you need to do is sort your icons into the new folders to move them to the respective desktops (there is another way to do it from within the Dexpot interface; right click tray icon/desktop windows/icon tab, but it is very cumbersome).
It is also possible to add the different desktops to the ‘send to’ context menu in Windows using a program like SendToSendTo or Send To Toys (see screenshot to the right), note that you would need to use ‘shift’ in conjunction with the send to entry to move your files across folders.
- Requires moving your icons into folders: yes.
- Links to folders: yes, any change in the folder is reflected instantly in the virtual desktop and vice versa.
- Can move icons from one desktop to another: yes, by moving from one desktop folder to another, or via the send to menu as illustrated above.
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Overall rating for Dexpot: 9/10
4. Nimi Places: display the contents of folders in containers on the desktop
Once you move your icons into folders that make sense to you, you can display the contents of these folders on the desktop at all times much in the same way as ‘Fences’ above.
- Requires moving your icons into folders: yes, if you want to organize your icons into different containers.
- Links to folders: yes, any change in the folder is reflected instantly in the Nimi places containers and vice versa.
- Can move icons from one container to another: No, but interestingly you can cut and paste from one container to another.
- Can move icons from the desktop to the container: No, but cut and paste works.
- Can move icons from the container to the desktop: No, but cut and paste works.
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Overall rating for Nimi Places: 7/10
5. SideSlide: display the contents of folders inside a scrolling window
SideSlide offers a sliding interface that appears when you mouse over the top edge of your screen and can house RSS feeds, shortcuts, and all sorts of objects. For the purposes of desktop organization, we removed all objects, moved the desktop icons into folders on the hard drive, and than link to those folders within SideSlide.
- Requires moving your icons into folders: yes, if you want to organize your icons into different containers.
- Links to folders: yes, but any change in the folder is only reflected in the SideSlide container if you refresh it manually.
- Can move icons from one container to another: No, dragging and dropping COPIES items from one folder/container to another. Cutting and pasting is not an option.
- Can move icons from the desktop to the container: No, dragging and dropping COPIES items from the desktop to the container (and the folder it is linked to). Cutting and pasting doesn’t work either.
- Can move icons from the container to the desktop: Yes.
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Overall rating for SideSlide: 6/10
6. Stick: display the contents of folders as retractable tabs on the sides of your screen
Stick can add tabs to the side of your screen that can display RSS feeds and notes and provide other functions. For our purposes here we are only using the program’s ability to link tabs to folders.
- Requires moving your icons into folders: yes, if you want to organize your icons into different containers.
- Links to folders: yes, any change in the folder is reflected instantly in the Nimi places containers and vice versa.
- Can move icons from one container to another: Yes
- Can move icons from the desktop to the container: Yes.
- Can move icons from the container to the desktop: Yes.
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Overall rating for Stick: 8/10
7. Launchbar Commander: a floating, cascading menu that can browse your folders
If you opt to move your desktop icons to a folder and want a quick way to navigate their contents visually via floating, cascading menus, Launchbar commander is for you.
- Requires moving your icons into folders: yes, if you want to organize your icons into different categories.
- Links to folders: yes, any change in the folder is reflected instantly in the Launchbar Commander menus..
- Can move icons from one container to another: No.
- Can move icons from the desktop to the floating menu icons: No.
- Can move icons from the floating menu to the desktop: No.
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Overall rating for Launchbar Commander: 6/10
8. FSL Launcher: tabbed launcher that can be linked to your folders
Linking this launcher to your folders is not built into the program but is possible via the use of symbolic links (which is a feature of Windows that enables a folder to be in more than one place at the same time). I used a freeware called ‘Link Shell Extension’ to create symbolic link clones of my four folders in the launcher’s groups (in C:\Users\*username*\FSL\Launcher\Shortcuts).
- Requires moving your icons into folders: yes, if you want to organize your icons into different containers. You also need to create symbolic links clones as mentioned above.
- Links to folders: yes, any change in the folder is reflected in the FSL launcher tab; however, you will need to either refresh the tab or leave it and return again to see the change.
- Can move icons from one tab to another: No. Moving an item copies a shortcut to it to the other tab.
- Can move icons from the desktop to the tab: No, it makes copies of them if run as Administrator.
- Can move icons from the tab to the desktop: No, it makes copies of them.
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Overall rating for FSL Launcher : 6/10 (the app was simply not designed to be used in this way, unfortunately).
Part three: tools that can be useful to desktop icon management
The tools below can help you quickly manage your icons, although they do not offer any new ways of displaying and/or working with them.
9. DekstopOK: save and restore your desktop icon layouts
So you’ve got tons of icons on your desktop which keep arranged ‘just so’, in patterns that you are used to or that make sense to you, but then something happens and your icons are all messed up (say, an unexpected change in resolution brought about by a game or program, a remote desktop session that might scramble icons, or whatever).
Wouldn’t it be great if you could save your icon layouts and restore them at will? Wouldn’t it be great if you could have an icon layout(s) associated with each screen resolution? Wouldn’t it be great if a program could auto save your icon layouts periodically in case of an unexpected event? Yes it would, and that program is called DestkopOK, works great, and has a light footrprint to boot.
I’ve reviewed a number of these ‘icon layout saving’ apps over the years, and this one is my favorite (even as some others offer a saving via right-click context menu entry feature, which I like.)
10. Diswy: show and hide desktop icons with a single click
If you want a decluttered desktop in a single click, or if you are planning to use many of the tools mentioned above, you will appreciate the ability to hide and show desktop icons quickly (without having to right click and check/uncheck ‘show desktop icons’).
Diswy can be placed in the taskbar and does a great job. You could also check out a similar program called HideDesktopIcons if you like. (Also note that Fences, if you are using it, does this by double clicking on the desktop).
That’s it for this installment of tools. Note that I did not feature any Mac-like Docs or circular docks because I wanted the programs not just to display icons, but to (a) offer some sort of drag and drop interactivity, and (b) be able to display many of the containers at once (although I know that both Launchbar Commander and FSL Launcher do not necessarily meet all of these criteria).
[Thanks go to Alla K for creating the screenshots above.]
Do you use a free tool that can help manage, display or keep desktop icons organized that wasn’t mentioned above? Let us know in the comments section below.
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