Re: Article: Why Microsoft killed the Windows Start button
Quote:
Originally Posted by
real-lunatic
what a lot of crap
i tried windows 8 on my laptop and it really sucks. in 30 minutes i was back on Windows 7
i really don't think W8 gonna brake throug. Why change something that works in to something most people don't want
30 minutes! You are my hero. I made it 10 minutes and knew it was not personalized to the experience I wanted and was back to 7
Re: Article: Why Microsoft killed the Windows Start button
Quote:
Originally Posted by
manker
All this talk of the all-important start button has made me realise that I don't actually use it much.
I decided to stick with XP a while ago because I didn't like Win7's start menu layout.
It used to be that I relied on it but I guess at the time I didn't realise that I've got so used to XP - after however many years - that I have pinned everything I use regularly to the shortcut menu next to the start button and use that instead.
It makes sense, to me, to use that shortcut menu rather than navigating the start menu because it's quicker.
Perhaps these chaps at Microsoft are on to something, after all, and perhaps people are resisting because no-one likes change unless it was their idea.
I've got a touch-screen PC that I hardly use, so I'm probably going to give Win8 a go once the 0day monkeys have worked out the bugs for Microsoft.
The start menu is an obsolete concept.
In ubuntu's Unity, and Gnome Shell (both are linux desktops) the menus are phased out with "docks" in their place (hidden inside an overlay that appears when mouse is moved to the top left corner in gnome shell, and somethign similar can be done in unity) that hold your most commonly used apps, and a search system for finding the other apps that don't fit into the dock (or that you just dont want in your dock).
In real life usage, I find that I'm rarely using more than a few programs and using teh search for those rarely used apps is far quicker than navigating through start menus anyway.
Even in windows7 you've got something similar. Pin the most frequently used apps into your taskbar, and for those infrequent ones there is a search function built into teh start menu (unfortunately not as intuitive as the one in unity/gnome due to it returning too many irrelevant results (help, uninstall, etc.).
Re: Article: Why Microsoft killed the Windows Start button
I guess it doesn't matter as long as it's possible to easily access programs & turn off the machine. I don't like pushing the power button to do it. Those things tend to break over time.