Windows 8 Falls Behind Even the Maligned Vista


Recommended Posts

It does take me back but the search pane is gone so I have to go bring it all up again and let it know I want to search the store and not the default files. Ideally there should just be a search box at the top of the store.

I can totally see the point of apps, on a phone or tablet they are great, but on a big monitor, with lots of space to multitask, its just limiting me.

I'm undecided on the Search myself. I really, really like the idea of a unified location for search, that's in one consistent place, no matter the app, but like you said, sometimes a contextual search should be more obvious.

The best I can offer is that you press Win+Q when in an app. That should activate the search for the app that you're in, rather than search for the system. For example, if you are in the Windows Store, then pressing Win+Q should open a search in the Windows Store, and not elsewhere.

I kind of agree with you as far as metro.. not for desktop. I am seriously thinking about moving to Imac as my next purchase.

I must say Windows 7 is a stable version of Windows, but I made the move to a mac 3 years ago, and havn't missed Windows at all!

on the contrary. Customizing Windows is one thing.. to enhance or whatever you want to do. What YOU did is hack Windows 8 to be more like Windows 7. How many people that you know hack their Windows 7 to look more like Windows XP? If you have to add something to make it look like last years version..then why not just stick with last years version? The whole point of Windows 8 is lost on you because you want it to function more like Windows 7.

now who's getting it all wrong? the new start screen is only one small part of Windows 8, there have been a lot of other changes made, both on the front and back end of things. I really like a lot of the new desktop enhancements made in Windows 8, I myself have Start8 installed as well but I still find myself using the start screen still depending on what i'm doing

also not hacking, as it's just a program that doesn't even touch system files unlike Transformation Packs which i mention below

You aren't customizing..you're reverting. Big difference.

I'm all for Windows 8 on touch screens. It makes sense. (except for the abomination when it dumps you onto the desktop) but for non touch devices? Bleh.

no there really isn't a difference in this respect. if you want to talk reverting and completely changing, look at transformation packs, that's on a whole other level (which is what you seem to think making one change it)

That's not typical of user's screens. In fact someone went out of their way to troll with that picture. What is half that junk?

Ok, well here is my start screen. I haven't done anything to it.

testsa.jpg

Now you will say "Well just unpin all that stuff" True I could, though I don't use the start screen I use start8, but I never had to clean any of that stuff up on windows 7

post-420821-0-87550200-1356812859.png

Nick?

Ok, well here is my start screen. I haven't done anything to it.

Now you will say "Well just unpin all that stuff" True I could, though I don't use the start screen I use start8, but I never had to clean any of that stuff up on windows 7

Actually I think sometimes the user might have had to. Icons are usually created on the desktop, and sometimes in the start menu, unless the user turns off the "Show recently used applications", or whatever it was called.

I usually deslected the option to create a desktop icon, but I think it's obvious what I mean.

Now you will say "Well just unpin all that stuff" True I could, though I don't use the start screen I use start8, but I never had to clean any of that stuff up on windows 7

That's because it sat buried away in the Start Menu. No one ventures there, so no one ever knew how much clutter it created. Now it's time for installers to clean up their mess. But you're crying over archaic programs that no one ever uses.

That's because it sat buried away in the Start Menu. No one ventures there, so no one ever knew how much clutter it created. Now it's time for installers to clean up their mess.

When I think of the start menu, I don't think of clutter.

post-420821-0-87550200-1356812859.png

Typical users are going to spend lots of time properly categorizing and organizing their Start Screen? Really? The same people who shoved everything on the Desktop as shortcuts before Start Menu search?

Honestly, warwagon's picture was more accurate. They'll have apps plastered all over the start screen like someone sneezed all over their screen.

When I think of the start menu, I don't think of clutter.

It was cluttered all right, and cramped.

Typical users are going to spend lots of time properly categorizing and organizing their Start Screen? Really? The same people who shoved everything on the Desktop as shortcuts before Start Menu search?

Honestly, warwagon's picture was more accurate. They'll have apps plastered all over the start screen like someone sneezed all over their screen.

So far, I see no evidence of that. I know quite a few users of Windows 8, and they picked up right away that you can move and group tiles.

Typical users are going to spend lots of time properly categorizing and organizing their Start Screen? Really? The same people who shoved everything on the Desktop as shortcuts before Start Menu search?

Honestly, warwagon's picture was more accurate. They'll have apps plastered all over the start screen like someone sneezed all over their screen.

Not to mention these are the same people that have 9....yes I had a few people with 9 (NINE) IE toolbars on their computer. You could barely see the websites, and they did not mind that mess! It is shocking.

It was cluttered all right, and cramped.

yes and no. at least in the start menu things stayed alphabetized and not just in the order that you installed things

I do not dislike the start screen by any means but I think it could still use a little work (looks forward to windows blue update :))

It was cluttered all right, and cramped.

So far, I see no evidence of that. I know quite a few users of Windows 8, and they picked up right away that you can move and group tiles.

So being organized is now considered to be cluttered? There is a reason they make subfolders and maybe folders in there. Sometimes they have tools where you might use every once and a while, but it was much more organized.

This is like saying a doctors office is not organized because the separate patient files into individual file folders...THAT WAY is MUCH more organized. And the Start Menu WAS MORE organized than the Start Screen because they tucked some advanced tools in sub folders.

That's because it sat buried away in the Start Menu. No one ventures there, so no one ever knew how much clutter it created. Now it's time for installers to clean up their mess. But you're crying over archaic programs that no one ever uses.

It is impossible for installers to "clean up their mess" as what is needed varies wildly by person and the task that needs to be done. For instance, I don't need to launch the Visual Studio Command Prompt every day, but I do need it occasionally. How would the installer decide when it should create this shortcut and when it shouldn't? Having it buried somewhere that it can be surfaced from effortlessly makes the most sense. This was what the Start Menu did very well in Windows 7. It allows app developers to place shortcuts for everything that may be needed and allowed users to easily dig up those shortcuts when they were needed.

The Start Screen works counter to that. It requires the user to constantly clean up after every installer to get to the same point as Windows 7. Really, if MS wanted to keep it that way they should have placed an intermediary screen between the installer and the Start Screen asking users what shortcuts do they want on their Start Screen out of the 50 the installer has just created. But like most things in Windows 8, this stuff wasn't well thought out.

Typical users are going to spend lots of time properly categorizing and organizing their Start Screen? Really? The same people who shoved everything on the Desktop as shortcuts before Start Menu search?

Honestly, warwagon's picture was more accurate. They'll have apps plastered all over the start screen like someone sneezed all over their screen.

I guess if it's messy both ways (Start screen, Desktop), then it's not really a fault with the Start Screen. In cases like that, they might still like the Start Screen better, since they'll end up working from that the same way they worked from the desktop. And now they can scroll for more, rather than relying on ever smaller desktop icons.

yes and no. at least in the start menu things stayed alphabetized and not just in the order that you installed things

I do not dislike the start screen by any means but I think it could still use a little work (looks forward to windows blue update :))

So being organized is now considered to be cluttered? There is a reason they make subfolders and maybe folders in there. Sometimes they have tools where you might use every once and a while, but it was much more organized.

This is like saying a doctors office is not organized because the separate patient files into individual file folders...THAT WAY is MUCH more organized. And the Start Menu WAS MORE organized than the Start Screen because they tucked some advanced tools in sub folders.

Stuff is still alphabetized and organized by "Folder" (Albeit they're now expanded) in the "All Apps" part of the Start screen. That hasn't changed. The front end of the Start screen is that part of the Start Menu where all the "Recently used Applications" were.

So being organized is now considered to be cluttered? There is a reason they make subfolders and maybe folders in there. Sometimes they have tools where you might use every once and a while, but it was much more organized.

This is like saying a doctors office is not organized because the separate patient files into individual file folders...THAT WAY is MUCH more organized. And the Start Menu WAS MORE organized than the Start Screen because they tucked some advanced tools in sub folders.

Nobody wants to dig through subfolders of subfolders.

Typical users are going to spend lots of time properly categorizing and organizing their Start Screen? Really? The same people who shoved everything on the Desktop as shortcuts before Start Menu search?

Honestly, warwagon's picture was more accurate. They'll have apps plastered all over the start screen like someone sneezed all over their screen.

i think that shift has already been made. people organizing their 'icons' in groups or different screens is common now, no?

anecdotal: my father (73) has organized the win8 start to how he likes it. i didn't teach him. hes never owned a smart phone or tablet.

Nobody wants to dig through subfolders of subfolders.

That was the beauty of Start Menu search. The user didn't have to deal with the stuff in the Start Menu that way. The applications would organize their respective icons in logical sub folders and the end user would pull them up via search. 500 shortcuts could be added without cluttering anything. Even Windows was smart enough to only pick one icon to highlight as the "new" application in the menu, even if it created 500 icons on install.

now who's getting it all wrong? the new start screen is only one small part of Windows 8, there have been a lot of other changes made, both on the front and back end of things.

Not even slightly talking about changes made to it's "front and backend" of things. I'm talking about the look, feel and useability of Windows 8 and why you would need a "program" to enable the startmenu when you are so overjoyed with Windows 8 to begin with? Why not just use Windows 8 as Windows 8 instead of adding a "feature" that makes it more like Windows 7? Unless you are admitting that Windows 8 actually functions less that Windows 7..

I really like a lot of the new desktop enhancements made in Windows 8, I myself have Start8 installed as well but I still find myself using the start screen still depending on what i'm doing

Desktop enhancement? Do tell because I'm not seeing any desktop enhancement.

Stuff is still alphabetized and organized by "Folder" (Albeit they're now expanded) in the "All Apps" part of the Start screen. That hasn't changed.

I was more talking the main start screen (as was posted in the screenshots earlier) not so much the all programs section (which you are correct about btw)

That was the beauty of Start Menu search. The user didn't have to deal with the stuff in the Start Menu that way. The applications would organize their respective icons in logical sub folders and the end user would pull them up via search. 500 shortcuts could be added without cluttering anything. Even Windows was smart enough to only pick one icon to highlight as the "new" application in the menu, even if it created 500 icons on install.

Funny, when I installed the Office demo, the only icons I got on Start were the main apps. Everything else was buried in All Apps. It's time for other developers to do the same.

i think that shift has already been made. people organizing their 'icons' in groups or different screens is common now, no?

anecdotal: my father (73) has organized the win8 start to how he likes it. i didn't teach him.

Age isn't a factor in how one decides to organize. I know people who have 10 IE toolbars and a desktop full of shortcuts and files and ones who don't This cuts across age barriers. Probably a lot like people and how clean their car is on the inside. Age isn't a definitive predictor of how clean one will have the inside of their car.

That was the beauty of Start Menu search. The user didn't have to deal with the stuff in the Start Menu that way. The applications would organize their respective icons in logical sub folders and the end user would pull them up via search. 500 shortcuts could be added without cluttering anything. Even Windows was smart enough to only pick one icon to highlight as the "new" application in the menu, even if it created 500 icons on install.

I don't know what Dot Matrix was saying earlier. Those sub folders are still there, and everything is still organized in them as they were in the Start menu. And just like the Start Menu, the user still has to click "All Applications/Apps" to get to those sub folders.

I was more talking the main start screen (as was posted in the screenshots earlier) not so much the all programs section (which you are correct about btw)

Oh, I see. I guess I'm not sure where this discussion is focused on then, because the functionality that both sides are talking about is still there. Even the way to access that functionality, (In this case, the sub folders where all that extra stuff was organized.) is pretty much the same too.

EDIT: I guess in the main Start screen, MS made a decision to "organize" based on the most recently installed. They just put that stuff at the end of the tiles. Maybe, "Alphabetize" should be an option?

Not even slightly talking about changes made to it's "front and backend" of things. I'm talking about the look, feel and useability of Windows 8 and why you would need a "program" to enable the startmenu when you are so overjoyed with Windows 8 to begin with? Why not just use Windows 8 as Windows 8 instead of adding a "feature" that makes it more like Windows 7? Unless you are admitting that Windows 8 actually functions less that Windows 7..

when the hell did i say Windows 8 functions less than 7?!? and once again I say, how is adding a start menu any different than adding a dock? both change functionality yet you only seem to dispute the start menu
Desktop enhancement? Do tell because I'm not seeing any desktop enhancement.

you are blind then. let me make a list for you

1. ribbon in explorer

2. improved copy dialog box/algorithm

3. much improved Task manager

those are the top 3 front end changes, there are many more smaller changes in the backend

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Leave Secure Boot off, the Optiplex 7010 isn't getting a firmware update to support the changes...
    • Microsoft confirms Windows 11 26H2 to finally get one of the most requested features by Sayan Sen This past week Microsoft officially confirmed Windows 11 version 26H2 with the latest build, 26300.8697, for testing in the experimental Insider channel. The company also published more details about it mainly directed towards IT admins and system admins. Essentially version 26H2 will be delivered via an enablement package (eKB) over Windows 11 25H2. If you are wondering about some of the upcoming features in the next Windows version, one of them is certainly very interesting as Microsoft has confirmed it is finally bringing one of the most overwhelmingly requested features ever. March Rogers, the Partner Director of Design at Microsoft, recently highlighted some of the Search improvements that the company is testing, and during the interaction with users on X where he posted it, Rogers also confirmed that the company is working on disabling web search results inside Search. This is something which many users find quite annoying as Windows would often serve them links to Bing which it feels could be more helpful rather than bringing up the actual object or app the user may be searching for on their PC. Finally though the company is prioritizing local file search over the web. However the feature could not be disabled for many users as not all new features are immediately rolled out to everyone. Image via phantomofearth (X) Windows enthusiast phantomofearth who likes to dig deep into new builds uncovered the IDs you will need to enable these features. Using the following feature IDs the new Search-related features landing in Windows 11 26H2 can be used. Follow the steps below to enable the new Search experience on Windows 11 build 26300.8697: Download ViveTool from GitHub and unpack the files in a convenient and easy-to-find folder. Press Win + X and select Terminal (Admin). Switch Windows Terminal to the Command Prompt profile with the Ctrl + Shift + 2 shortcut or by clicking the arrow-down button at the top of the window. Navigate to the folder containing the ViveTool files with the CD command. For example, if you have placed ViveTool in C:\Vive, type CD C:\Vive. Type vivetool /enable /id: and press Enter. Restart your computer. If you change your mind and want to restore, repeat the steps above and replace /enable with /disable in the commands on steps 5 and 6. Delightedly and perhaps also expectedly, once you disable web search and other such bloat, the Windows 11 Search is said to get snappier as remarked by another Windows enthusiast Xeno.
    • Makes me think of Family Guy - "Carl Sagan's Cosmos... edited for Rednecks" 🤣 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ljt5iESYA7k&t=2s
    • Microsoft PC Manager 3.21.7.0 (Offline Installer) by Razvan Serea With Microsoft PC Manager, users can easily perform basic computer maintenance and enhance the speed of their devices with just one click. This app offers a range of features, including disk cleanup, startup app management, virus scanning, Windows Update checks, process monitoring, and storage management. Microsoft PC Manager key features: Storage Manager- easily uninstall infrequently used apps, manage large files, perform a cleanup, and set up Storage Sense to automatically clear temporary files. Health Checkup feature -scans for potential problems, viruses, and startup programs to turn off. It helps you identify unnecessary items to remove, optimizing your system's performance. Pop-up Management - block pop-up windows from appearing in apps. Windows Update - scans your system for any pending updates. Startup Apps - enable or disable startup apps on your PC, allowing you to optimize your system's startup performance. Browser Protection - rest assured that harmful programs cannot alter your default browser. Also enables you to change your default browser. Process Management - allows you to conveniently terminate any active process, ensuring optimal system performance and resource utilization. Anti-virus protection - Fully integrated with Windows Security. Safeguard your PC anytime. Quick Steps: Download Microsoft PC Manager Offline Installer (APPX/MSIX) with Adguard Adguard serves as a third-party online service, offering a user-friendly method for directly downloading appx, appxbundle, and msixbundle files from the Microsoft Store. Official download links will be generated for both the app's various versions and its dependency packages. How to download Microsoft PC Manager Offline Installer (APPX/MSIX) 1. Initially, you must find the app URL within the Microsoft Store. Access the Microsoft Store via your browser and search for "Microsoft PC Manager". Once located, copy the app URL, which includes the product ID, either from the address bar or from the provided link below. https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9PM860492SZD 2. Now paste the app URL into the designated area, then click the check mark button to produce a direct download link. 3. To download, right-click the relevant link and select “Save link as…” from your browser's menu. Occasionally, Microsoft Edge may flag the download as insecure. In such cases, consider utilizing alternative browsers such as Google Chrome or Firefox to successfully complete the download. Microsoft PC Manager is a completely free tool optimized exclusively for use on Windows 10 (19042.0 and above) and Windows 11. Download: Microsoft PC Manager 3.21.7.0 | from Microsoft Store View: Microsoft PC Manager Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Dedicated
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      DrWankel earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      DrWankel earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      Supreme Spray LV earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      505
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      177
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      84
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      76
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!