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by userulluipeste
5106 days ago
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The entire transition to something new could have been made without alienating the current Windows's big user community. The reasons underlying the adopted changes are weak, change done mostly for the sake of change or because the existing state being "too old", and less considering the potential real benefits in usability. For example this - "the old Start Menu was crowded, forced you to scroll a lot through shortcuts". What the solution could have been? Addressing the mess of having too many useless shortcuts! Every time I was installing a new Windows version I had to manually clean the Start Menu clutter. What Microsoft did? What prevents now the new Start Screen to become overloaded with too many items? You won't be forced to scroll a lot through shortcuts, you'll be forced now to scroll a lot through loads of bloated screens! Where is the real progress here? |
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