Overview — SMOz: The Smart Start Menu Organizer for Faster App Access
SMOz (Start Menu Organizer) is a lightweight Windows utility that automatically organizes shortcuts in the Start menu into user-defined categories using a template-driven approach.
Key features
- Template-based categorization: Uses editable template files (categories + matching patterns or regex) to sort shortcuts into folders.
- Batch operations with undo/redo: Apply changes in bulk and undo/redo unlimited steps (memory permitting).
- Drag & drop UI: Graphical interface for reorganizing items and creating categories.
- Icon previews: Displays icons for Start menu items to make reorganization easier.
- Atomic changes: Applies filesystem changes atomically to avoid partial modifications.
- Compatibility & tech: Originally written in C# for .NET Framework 2.0; historically tested on Windows XP and later versions (users report needing admin rights on Windows 7+).
- Open-source / license: Project hosted on SourceForge (GPL v2). Latest public releases date from mid‑2000s; project activity is limited but downloadable builds are available on SourceForge and third‑party archives.
When to use it
- You have a cluttered All Programs / Start menu and want to group similar apps (Internet, Multimedia, Office, Programming, etc.).
- You prefer rule/template-driven automation to manual folder edits.
- You need a small, offline tool that runs on legacy Windows environments.
Caveats
- Interface and template editor can be non‑intuitive for new users.
- Some reviewers note limited documentation and the need to run as Administrator on newer Windows.
- Project appears inactive; binaries and sources are available from SourceForge and archive sites—exercise usual caution with third‑party downloads.
Sources: SMOz project page (smoz.sourceforge.net), SourceForge project listing, Softonic and archival download sites.
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