Do you want the start menu in Windows 8?


Do you want the start menu in Windows 8  

631 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you want the start menu in Windows 8?

    • Yes
      351
    • No
      280


Recommended Posts

For me, its much less about wanting the classic Start Menu but wanting either better integration or better separation between Metro and the Desktop. Most arguments about the menu really boil down to that. At the most basic, add a visible icon since there is zero benefit to hiding it. That way it also orients with the taskbar instead of being a different entity.

No, I'd rather get some information at a glance from the start screen than have a small menu that really doesn't show me that much.

Really, I launch most of my applications by typing in the first few letters and pressing Enter. Windows 8 supports that, so for me it's no big deal. Just pin your frequently used apps to the start screen and access the others when needed via search.

This topic has been clubbed to death like a baby seal, but I don't think there has ever been a simple yes or no poll. I tried searching for one but didn't find anything.

The reason for this poll, is because of the Editorial on the front page

Windows 8 users still want a Start menu and a Facebook app

http://www.neowin.ne...-a-facebook-app

While this isn't the entire Windows 8 user base it is part of the Neowin user base.

Sadly the start menu is most likely never returning to Windows.

The Start menu has returned, and it's name is 'Start8' (tried them all, and this is by far the best). Sometimes Microsoft doesn't furnish a particular application, or just a very basic application. Reaching out to a third party application supplier is always a great choice.

So basically if you need a Start Menu go out and add it on. Jeez, does Microsoft always have to be the only solution to a non-existent problem!

  • Like 1

Nope. I like the start screen much more than the start menu. I am happy the start menu is gone. Embrace the future!! :D

Future? Touch? I rather see this as an stagnation of technology... because we haven't been able to read the minds yet and also because of the inefficiency vs a mouse.

No its better than the start menu ever was, No more moving shortcuts around and deleting web,readme and uninstall shortcuts it just shows my programs.

On most of my programs, those still show up in the Start Screen, except now they are in your face every time you go to All Apps. Yeah having folder structure is SOOOOOOO horrible, but I do not mind seeing these readmes and other random files every time I go to All Apps!

SK[' timestamp=1360342690' post='595510154]

Because it's not native.

The Start Menu is dead and never to return, get over it people.

Try using Hyper-V, VMWare, a Mac with Bootcamp, or a touchscreen point of sale machine with no keyboard on Windows 8, then get over it yourself.

Try using Hyper-V, VMWare, a Mac with Bootcamp, or a touchscreen point of sale machine with no keyboard on Windows 8, then get over it yourself.

Considering you should be more than able to use keyboard shortcuts with most of these, there is no problem here.

On a touchscreen, Start can be accessed by the Charms Bar, so again, no issues.

On most of my programs, those still show up in the Start Screen, except now they are in your face every time you go to All Apps. Yeah having folder structure is SOOOOOOO horrible, but I do not mind seeing these readmes and other random files every time I go to All Apps!

May I ask why you are constantly in that menu that it causes you so much pain? Between app pinning and Search, there are easier ways of getting around to the things you need to find.

May I ask why you are constantly in that menu that it causes you so much pain? Between app pinning and Search, there are easier ways of getting around to the things you need to find.

Um maybe because I have so many programs, and when I am paid to do work I do work. I do not have hours to spend pinning everything and then I will have to horizontally scroll through all the shortcuts on the start screen.

For example: I do not need to pin "Visual Studio Command Prompt", yet I still do use it every once and a while. I do not have to scroll through hundreds of boxes to find it. With the Start Menu, it is MUCH MUCH more organized: Start - Visual Studio 2010 - Visual Studio Tools - Visual Studio Command Prompt.

Nice....Clean....Organized....not in my face every time.

Um maybe because I have so many programs, and when I am paid to do work I do work. I do not have hours to spend pinning everything and then I will have to horizontally scroll through all the shortcuts on the start screen.

For example: I do not need to pin "Visual Studio Command Prompt", yet I still do use it every once and a while. I do not have to scroll through hundreds of boxes to find it. With the Start Menu, it is MUCH MUCH more organized: Start - Visual Studio 2010 - Visual Studio Tools - Visual Studio Command Prompt.

Nice....Clean....Organized....not in my face every time.

Start - (typing "comand") c - o - m (already listed at "c") - Visual Studio Command Prompt

  • Like 2

Um maybe because I have so many programs, and when I am paid to do work I do work. I do not have hours to spend pinning everything and then I will have to horizontally scroll through all the shortcuts on the start screen.

For example: I do not need to pin "Visual Studio Command Prompt", yet I still do use it every once and a while. I do not have to scroll through hundreds of boxes to find it. With the Start Menu, it is MUCH MUCH more organized: Start - Visual Studio 2010 - Visual Studio Tools - Visual Studio Command Prompt.

Nice....Clean....Organized....not in my face every time.

^ the start screen does this automaticly and filters out the crap without having to send them to the recycle bin. Best of both worlds

But your right there is a lot of scrolling in the start screen better to have a tiny all programs menu no scrolling there /s

Hell yes. For people without touchscreen monitors (which is the majority of monitors), you need the damn start button in Windows. Hell, I still would want the start button on a monitor without a touchscreen. I can't tolerate Windows 8 without a start button.

  • Like 2

Just pin your frequently used apps to the start screen and access the others when needed via search.

I disagree when you are talking about primary Desktop users. The Start Screen is clearly NOT for Frequent Desktop apps. The cleanest flow is that all of your commons (even the dynamic ones of the classic menu) are pinned to the taskbar. Uncommon ones pin to StartScreen and infrequent ones are searched or worse, browsed for.

But your right there is a lot of scrolling in the start screen better to have a tiny all programs menu no scrolling there /s

Our biology prefers thinner columns so the smaller space of the classic menu is by no means a detriment some pretend it to be since we can only scan one at a time. The issue isn't scrolling, its finding what you want in multiple columns vs a nested single column. (It 'breaks' organization since it boils up subfolders to the main level in an effort to be friendlier to people that don't understand the organization. In practice, those people never used it that way anyway and it just frustrates those that have.)

I don't need it (and I am a "command line guy", I spend most of my time using command line/power shell), but the good solution would be that the user can enable it or disable it (the start menu and the start screen as well). That way, everyone would be happy, and that's the point of it anyway...

I don't miss the it and got used to the new Start Screen just like I was mad during the transition from toolbars to ribbon in Office. I got used to the ribbon.

Hey how about a bring the Start button but it brings you to the start screen for people who like buttons instead of hot corners. I really don't care much about the Old start button.

Yes, I do.

I won't bother with my reasons since

A) They have been explained many times before

B) Someone will choose to tell me how I can achieve the same results in Windows 8 without a Start Menu, despite the fact that:

C) It is a personal preference.

Very well said, friend! Couldn't have said it better myself. :)

I don't personally. I'm quite happy using one of the alternatives (like Start8).

What I want is for the Start Screen to be better, both functionality wise and with how it works with the desktop?

It's speaks volumes about windows 8 and metro when over 40% of posters at a predominately windows site (aka neoWIN) want the start menu back.

Your point is valid but I think it's important to distinguish the posters here as experienced Desktop users. Consumers who may buy an AIO touchscreen or a tablet (not too many consumers at this point), they won't care much about the Start Menu.

I find it far more efficient and capable but not many soccer moms are going to search enough to care about how clumsy Modern UI search is, or want to quickly browse their computer from the Start Menu, or Recorded TV, or Favorites, or their Personal Folder, or the Network.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Adobe Acrobat Reader DC 2026.001.21651 by Razvan Serea Adobe Acrobat Reader DC software is the free, trusted standard for viewing, printing, signing, and annotating PDFs. Its the only PDF viewer that can open and interact with all types of PDF content – including forms and multimedia. It’s connected to Adobe Document Cloud – so you can work with PDFs on computers and mobile devices. Adobe Document Cloud is a revolutionary, modern and efficient way to get work done with documents in the office, at home or on-the-go. At the heart of Document Cloud is the all-new Adobe Acrobat DC, which will take e-signatures mainstream by delivering free e-signing with every individual subscription. Document Cloud includes a set of integrated services that use a consistent online profile and personal document hub. With Adobe Document Cloud, people will be able to create, review, approve, sign and track documents whether on a desktop or mobile device. Businesses will be able to take advantage of Document Cloud for enterprise which provides enterprise-class document services that integrate into systems of record such as CRM, HCM, CLM, and CMS, adding speed, efficiency and transparency to getting business done with documents. Adobe Acrobat Reader DC new feature highlights: Work with PDFs from anywhere with the new, free Acrobat DC mobile app for Android or iOS. Select functionality is also available on Windows Phone. Use the new Fill & Sign tool in your desktop software to complete PDF forms fast with smart autofill. Download the free Adobe Fill & Sign mobile app to add the same option to your iPad or Android tablet device. Save money on ink and toner when printing from your Windows PC. Store and access files in Adobe Document Cloud with 5GB of free storage. Get instant access to recent files across desktop, web, and mobile devices with Mobile Link. Sync your Fill & Sign autofill collection across desktop, web, and iPad devices. Adobe PDF Pack premium features includes: Convert documents and images to PDF files. Use your mobile device camera to take a picture of a paper document or form and convert it to PDF. Turn PDFs into editable Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or RTF files. Combine multiple files into a single PDF (web only). Get signatures from others with a complete e-signature service. Send, track, and confirm delivery of documents electronically instead of using fax or overnight services (tracking not available on mobile). Store and access files online with 20GB of storage. Download: Adobe Acrobat Reader DC 64-bit | 719.0 MB (Freeware) Link: Adobe Acrobat Reader DC Home Page | Release Notes | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • The consumer ESU is ending in 4 months. LTSC isn't now, never has been, and never will be for consumer use, it is for OT usage - plant machinery, medical devices, manufacturing equipment etc. LTSC requires a Microsoft EA. You can't legally obtain LTSC to run on your PC at home.
    • Hmm actually looks decently interesting!  
    • Being on GitHub doesn't make something safe. Like any unofficial scripts to do x or y this caters to people with just enough knowledge to be dangerous. If you want to do what this does, and you actually know what you're doing then write your own script (or maybe just add the reg keys yourself) if you don't have the ability to read and understand what a script is doing, and especially don't run it with elevated privileges. Or in this case just use an MSA, sign up the normal route, and stop trying to push water up hill
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      JKR earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      moog19 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Mentor
      grik went up a rank
      Mentor
    • Dedicated
      JKR earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Year In
      CHUNWEI earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      489
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      271
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      75
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      68
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!