Shelgeyr wrote:
Talya wrote:
I tried using the start screen.
It's far less efficient.
I also don't like the new "start button" they're adding, because all it does is invoke the start screen. One of many problems with the start screen is it completely takes over the screen. The classic start button is better for multitasking.
Gonna go out on a limb here and suggest that you're probably a heavy mouse-user.
I hit the Win key on my keyboard and type the name of the app I want to launch, then hit [Enter].
The handful of apps I launch every day, sometimes several times in a day, I pin to my taskbar to make them quicker & easier to get to.
Functionally, it works in Win8 exactly the way it does in Win7.
Initially, I thought I'd never get used to not having a Start button.
I got over it. Pretty quickly.
Based on this, you don't need any sort of start menu at all, just a text search launcher like Launchy:
http://www.launchy.net/index.php. I tried to use Win8 for several months, and I found like many are saying, the "Start Screen" is just totally unnecessary on a non-touch screen PC. I can understand it on phone, tablet, even a PC (like a kitchen PC for recipes that is screen only), but it makes no sense as a PC primary user interface, designed for multitasking. I immediately jumped to the desktop mode, and would never see the start screen again. Metro apps are absolutely useless for multitasking. As well, it's absolutely distracting when you're deep in a task, and think "Oh, I need to launch this app to do such and such", hit the win key, and BAM your focus has to completely shift from the existing windows to a brand new full screen interface. For some reason, it really bothered me that it took away my entire focus from my task at hand, much more offensive than the old start menu overlay. I'm not opposed to entirely new UI's for the conventional PC, but it's painfully obvious they designed this as the "OS of the future", to be on tablets/phones/touch screen PC's and completely ignored the standard PC.
Regarding the business side (where all the money in the PC market is made,) I would never, EVER recommend this for my standard users. Two versions of Internet explorer? With two different sets of settings, two different plugin configurations? Oh, you're having a problem in IE? Which version? Install chrome, you get two different versions with two different settings hives as well? Yeah, that's supportable. If I could lock the users out of metro entirely, and just give them Win8 "the desktop operating system", then maybe. As it stands, it's an unsupportable nightmare.