Those who have already tried Windows 7, could not help but notice the innovations that, from my point of view, have significantly improved the system compared to Vista. One of these novelties was the addition of a Jump list (a list of commands and shortcuts) that appears when you right-click on the icon in the updated taskbar. This is a really convenient tool, believe me. But not all programs support it, in particular, our beloved Firefox does not yet support this functionality (as does Chrome, however). However, you can get a jump list right now, at the price of nine hundred kilobytes downloaded.
In order not to be unfounded, I will illustrate what the context menu looks like before installing Winfox:
And after installing it:
As you can see, you will be able to do some standard operations much faster, like switching to a frequently used server, or creating a new tab. By the way, creating a new window is not such a useful function: a new program window can be created by clicking on the icon in the taskbar with the middle mouse button (wheel).
But still, despite the fact that the functionality of the Jump list in WinFox is inferior to the same in Microsoft Office 2010, this is not surprising — with a browser, you can't do this.
WinFox (Windows 7 32/64)