Actually, that is open to interpretations.
First - does Windows 7 not show you the windows that were opened as a result
of hitting that button?
If so, here is your solution. :)
(Yeah, Beta, though. And I have not checked it, so I may be wrong.)

Second - the quick launch bar and the taskbar are in the same bar, so, just
hit the necessary chrome application - it has a name. And maybe if you were
not so lazy, you would not be having so many windows open!!!
:P
(Full disclosure - I usually have a lot of windows - lazy also. Though I do
click on the taskbar button and not on the quick launch button if it
something I already have (that has a quick launch button). And... I do not
really use the Application feature, it kind of annoys me that it is out of
the actual browser, I like to Control+Tab things.)

☆PhistucK


On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 22:49, Ted <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> I have application shortcuts for gmail and google reader on my quick
> launch bar. When I want an application, the quickest thing to do is
> hit the icon. Over time, open gmail/reader windows pile up in the
> background (and get out of sync with each other).
>
> It'd be great if application shortcuts could be set up to reactivate
> previously opened windows instead of always creating new ones. Lots of
> non-document-based desktop applications behave that way, and I think
> the behavior would make application shortcuts feel less like taskbar
> browser bookmarks and more like native applications.
>
> >
>

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