Recommended Posts

The fact that Windows 7 is gearing up to be a ripping success tells me that you are totally utterly wrong, but hell don't let me stop you going on your delusional Anti-7 rants. You strike me as one of those people that will still be using XP in 2056 because you just can't adapt to change.

Microsoft follow what the majority want, and so far the majority say Windows 7 rules.

I realize that this is hard for you, so I'll type slowly.....

In the real world, where real people live, it is quite possible to like something, without liking every single thing, and without becoming a ***** ****** fanboi.

As a whole, win7 is very good, and I never said it wasn't.

But there several annoyances, and when I find something I don't like...or something that worked very well in a previous version but now functions less well, or with less functionality I'll say so...and your ****** little attacks won't change that.

* words removed due to ........

I realize that this is hard for you, so I'll type slowly.....

In the real world, where real people live, it is quite possible to like something, without liking every single thing, and without becoming a ***** ****** fanboi.

As a whole, win7 is very good, and I never said it wasn't.

But there several annoyances, and when I find something I don't like...or something that worked very well in a previous version but now functions less well, or with less functionality I'll say so...and your ****** little attacks won't change that.

* words removed due to ........

guess ,it wont matter.

since they aren't going back to the old way anyway.

at some point you would have to move on

win7

support SSD , multicore cpus much better

that why xp is dead

I realize that this is hard for you, so I'll type slowly.....

In the real world, where real people live, it is quite possible to like something, without liking every single thing, and without becoming a ***** ****** fanboi.

As a whole, win7 is very good, and I never said it wasn't.

But there several annoyances, and when I find something I don't like...or something that worked very well in a previous version but now functions less well, or with less functionality I'll say so...and your ****** little attacks won't change that.

* words removed due to ........

Great contribution :D what do you do for an encore?

guess ,it wont matter.

since they aren't going back to the old way anyway.

at some point you would have to move on

win7

support SSD , multicore cpus much better

that why xp is dead

Actually, the start menu is not, repeat not one of my main annoyances...(those have been well documented... :whistle: )

As for using win7...I am in fact using it as my main os, and I have no intention of going back to xp. As stated before, when I don't like something, I speak up...and that will never change. Most people get that...some never will.

  • 3 weeks later...

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

Also, there is no sort by name, so everything gets all hosed up that way too after trying to manipulate the menu as I need to.

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

Also, there is no sort by name, so everything gets all hosed up that way too after trying to manipulate the menu as I need to.

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

i used to be like that, then i found out you can type any program in the start menu and press enter and poof there it is! so much faster.

winkey > programname or keyword > enter ^^

Takes some getting used to but really its better and faster

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

Also, there is no sort by name, so everything gets all hosed up that way too after trying to manipulate the menu as I need to.

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

460 programs? Damn I'm surprised the pcs are still running.

Reformatting must be a real chore.

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

Also, there is no sort by name, so everything gets all hosed up that way too after trying to manipulate the menu as I need to.

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

Um, you totally have control over how the All Programs folder is organized and all the shorcuts within it.

Click the start button, right click on All Programs and click Open All Users. You'll have to simply do Open also as some shortcuts are under that folder.

Then in each of those folders, you will have just have a folder called Programs which is where all your Start Menu All Programs shortcuts are kept

Then you can create folders, like a folder called "a", a folder called "b", a folder called "c", etc... And you can cut and paste your shortcuts into those folders. It's quite simple actually.

Here is how I have mine look when I click on "All Programs" in the Start Menu:

Notice how I just cut and pasted all the shortcuts out of their own folders so I could have them all together

491e28e3.jpg?t=1247240526

Now you have no reason to not switch to Windows 7. Easy peasy!

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

So you've lost sight of why you've created this meticulous structure. You did it so that you can easily find and launch a program. Vista and Windows 7 abolish the need for organizing Start Menu shortcuts into folders, because you can just type in what you want to launch. It is a faster and more efficient system than what you created. This might upset you, because now any idiot with fingers and a keyboard can launch programs and files faster than your old system, without giving any thought or effort to organizing their stuff.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

It seems like you didn't try very hard then. You can create new folders just the same as in XP.

post-17075-1247254928_thumb.png

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

Yup, you're being steered. Just like people were coerced into using a GUI during the MSDOS/Windows transition, or forced to use a taskbar during the Win3.11 to Windows 95 transition. You're quite welcome to stick with the old, there is no need to try and drag the rest of us down with you.

i for one am GLAD that the classic start menu is gone god i hate that thing since the new XP menu.

what i did find a pity was that in vista when you pressed 'all programs' it was integrated into the same thing wich took some getting used to, but since i know what everything is named anyways i just use keywords to run things on my computer (aka winkey > keyword > enter = program)

I do think there should be an option to make the all programs pop up like it used to in XP, its a compromise wich might satisfy some people.. Microsoft gets their 'New' start menu interface and people get to pick if they want their program list integrated or pop outside of the menu.

Thats fair no ?

And why would you not want to get win7 at all just because of the start menu? its a superior OS to vista and xp, surely someone smarter than us might write an app/hack that will allow/enable the classic start menu.

yesterday, i hoped on an old XP machine at work that had the classic start menu. Its been about a year or so since I have used the classic menu and I must say its really time to let it die. Everyone who is complaining that 7 needs it or won't switch to 7 because of it, you do realize that every future release of Windows from now on is not going to have it. I have no problem with people being content with XP, but its another thing to think that Microsoft is not going to evolve windows and change the UI. Keeping the old menu just meant more old lines of Code in Windows. Usability tests show that the new Start Menu is better

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

Out of general interest, why do you have so many programs?

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

And I thought I had a lot of programs installed. I think you need to re-evaluate which ones you actually because there's no way you use all 460 programs. That's just craziness. By the way, you can still organize the start menu in 7 the same way you could in XP and Vista.

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

Also, there is no sort by name, so everything gets all hosed up that way too after trying to manipulate the menu as I need to.

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

How about, instead of going to "Start > Programs > A" which is two layers in to the start menu, you try hitting your Windows key or clicking on the start button and just typing the letter "A". There you go, problem solved, and you didn't have to spent 5 or 10 minutes making folders and moving programs into them.

If the classic start menu is gone in the final release, It will definitely stop me from using 7 on any of my 10+ computers.

I have more than 460 programs installed on my main pc's and have my start menu structured like so http://www.hostsalive.com/screens/20090710-v7m-99kb.jpg

As you can see, there is no way in hell I would be able to use that useless space for "all programs" that MS is forcing on people.

I tried to do this in Windows 7 and there is no way to manually create the lettered folders accept when installing a program which allows me to alter the program folder upon installation.

Also, there is no sort by name, so everything gets all hosed up that way too after trying to manipulate the menu as I need to.

I think it is absolute BS to be "Steered" as a consumer, this is going to make me stick with XP through this whole windows 7 phase just as i stayed away from vista (accept this particular laptop I am currently writing on).

That takes way too much (mental) memory. I'm not going to look under 'A' when I want Nettools, or want to run an FLV player. I'd much rather type 'ne' or 'fl' (or 'a' if that's how I really remember it).

  • 3 weeks later...
Bring back the old start bar ASAP, why not have it for the people who love it

Why doesn't Microsoft also bring back the MS-DOS Executive and the Program and File Managers for those who love them, too?

Sigh I really fail to understand how the new start menu can be in any way slower then the classic one.... but each to his own....

I see it coming already... someday in Windows 8 or 9 I bet Microsoft will introduce a new designed fallback "theme" to replace the Windows Classic style and hell will break loose on various forums all over the world...

Bring back the old start bar ASAP, why not have it for the people who love it

It makes the code three times as hard to maintain, because you have to maintain two compatible implementations side by side (as well as anything else that depends on it, and anything it depends on). This costs money, and takes away resources that could be used elsewhere. Nothing is free.

It also makes Windows inconsistent and more difficult to support.

When you have two different implementations of the same feature, removing one of them is almost always the right decision.

  • 1 month later...
Actually, the "classic" Start menu was more or less unchanged since its introduction in Windows 95.
...and people complained about that back then too, asking where their Win3.1 Program Manager had gone.

You're right, there were some people that were concerned by the "classic Start menu" interface introduced to us in Chicago/Windows 95. And so Microsoft continued to include Program Manager in Windows through WindowsXP SP1, even allowing for the default shell to be changed to progman.exe. Microsoft finally removed it in Windows XP SP2 (actually, a "stub" was left behind) and Vista (not even a stub) and very few people noticed.

It might seem odd that I'm pointing this out when I'm a fan of the classic start menu, but I'm not trying to win an argument here. As we all know, winning an argument on the Internet typically doesn't mean much.

What's interesting to me is that Microsoft was willing to include the old Program Manager for years. I think it is reasonable to guess that Microsoft did this because they had concern about the opinion and perspective of the user base and in addressing this concern Microsoft removed a potential argument against upgrading to the new Windows release, Windows 95.

Microsoft included progman.exe despite the fact that the user base overwhelmingly preferred the new Start Menu interface. In fact, as I recall the new interface helped drive the Windows NT 4.0 release.

Now, to be fair Microsoft also included the classic start menu interface as an option in Windows XP, which introduced an updated more dynamic interface. However, unlike the removal of progman.exe, many users are actually taking notice that this classic start menu interface is being removed.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Oh man, but what if I have the PS3 version?
    • Floorp 12.15.0 by Razvan Serea Floorp is a cutting-edge web browser that combines the trusted foundation of Mozilla's Firefox with a unique Japanese perspective, offering users an exceptional online experience. This open-source browser prioritizes privacy, customization, and security. Floorp is transparent, with no user tracking or data sharing, and it's completely open source. With a strict no-tracking policy and full transparency, your personal information remains private. As an open-source project, Floorp not only shares its source code but also its build environment, inviting users to contribute and build their unique versions. The regular updates, based on Firefox ESR, ensure that you always have the latest features and security enhancements. Floorp key features: Strong Tracking Protection: Floorp offers robust tracking protection, safeguarding users from malicious tracking and fingerprinting on the web. Flexible Layout: Customize Floorp's layout to your heart's content, including moving the tab bar, hiding the title bar, and more for a personalized browsing experience. Switchable Design: Choose from five distinct designs for the Floorp interface, and even switch between OS-specific designs for a unique look Regular Updates: Based on Firefox ESR, Floorp receives updates every four weeks, ensuring up-to-date security even before Firefox's releases. No User Tracking: Floorp prioritizes user privacy by abstaining from collecting personal information, tracking users, or selling user data, with no affiliations with advertising companies. Completely Open Source: The full source code for Floorp is open to the public, allowing transparency and enabling anyone to explore and build their own version. Dual Sidebar: Floorp features a versatile built-in sidebar for webpanels and browsing tools, making it perfect for multitasking and quick access to bookmarks, history, and websites. Flexible Toolbar & Tab Bar: Customize your browser with Tree Style Tabs, vertical tabs, and bookmark bar modifications, catering to both beginners and experts in customization. User-Centric Web Experience: Floorp prioritizes user privacy and collaboratively blocks harmful trackers. Floorp 12.15.0 changelog: Refine appearance of Start top sites and Hub sidebar by @CutterKnife in #2435 Improvement command pallete by @Walkmana-25 in #2429 Fix gesture command by @Walkmana-25 in #2425 Add Mac OS formatting for modifier keys in shortcut editor by @Walkmana-25 in #2424 refactor: bridge as little by @nyanrus in #2416 fix(pwa): follow Firefox 150 ShellService API changes (Bug 1985098) by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2409 feat(notes): Desktop向けThree-Way Merge Sync実装 by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2402 fix(pages-settings): resolve Invalid Hook Call error in SortableContext by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2350 README: fix signpath avatar url by @CutterKnife in #2453 Enhance command palette with new actions by @Walkmana-25 in #2449 feat(split-view): implement tab drop functionality with overlay and new window zone by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2445 fix: restore 'Hide Interface', 'Toggle Navigation Panel', and 'Rest Mode' keyboard shortcuts by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2458 fix: prevent unified extensions panel from closing on bottom navbar (#2079) by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2462 fix: prevent workspace system from overriding SessionStore tab selection on startup by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2461 fix: prevent multi-row tabs from disappearing when sidebar opens website by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2460 fix: prevent private container tab from saving first page to history by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2459 fix: prevent browser close when container tab is the only tab open by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2465 Resolve conflicts for #2467: Add split-view mouse gesture commands by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2472 fix(os-server): auto-generate auth token on enable by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2471 fix(settings): change broken link to Floorp Docs by @regularentropy in #2477 Enhanced search functionality in the command palette — now supports English keywords, Japanese morphological analysis, and hiragana search by @Walkmana-25 in #2470 fix(patches): align Gecko patches with Linux CI runtime by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2482 feat(pwa): add Firefox Container support for PWA apps by @Ryosuke-Asano in #2443 fix(statusbar): add event listener for buttons in status bar by @greeeen-dev in #2484 Download: Floorp 64-bit | 95.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Floorp Website | Github Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Google Gemini co-lead Noam Shazeer is leaving for OpenAI by Pradeep Viswanathan Noam Shazeer is best known as one of the co-authors of the 2017 “Attention Is All You Need” paper, which introduced the Transformer architecture that now powers most large language models. He also worked on several major Google AI projects, including LaMDA, before leaving the company in 2021 to co-found Character.AI. He also authored the Sparsely-gated Mixture of Experts (2016) paper, which is popular among the AI community. After falling behind OpenAI and Anthropic a couple of years ago, Google brought Shazeer back in 2024 as part of a major deal with Character.AI. Through this deal, along with Noam, several other researchers returned to Google DeepMind. More recently, he was a vice president of engineering at Google and a technical co-lead for Gemini. Today, Noam Shazeer announced on X that he is leaving Google and joining OpenAI. In his post, Shazeer said it was a difficult decision to move on, adding that he was proud of the Google team and what it had built together. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman welcomed the move with a post of his own, saying Shazeer was one of the people he had most wanted to work with since OpenAI’s early days. Google has made strong progress with Gemini over the past year, closing the gap with OpenAI in several areas. But losing Noam Shazeer is a major talent setback for them, especially after bringing him back less than two years ago by spending a fortune. For OpenAI, the hire adds one of the industry’s most experienced language model researchers to a team that is already pushing ahead with ChatGPT, Codex, and its next generation of frontier models.
    • I'm lost too... what did you mean by your first comment then?
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Harris Gilbert earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Vincian earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      541
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      171
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      85
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      64
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!