Fixing Windows 8, Part 3: Start Screen

It’s the face of Windows 8. Let’s fix it

The Windows 8 Start screen is fine on tablet devices, but is borderline useless to users of traditional PCs. Fortunately, a few simple fixes will make this crucial user interface better for all users.

This one is a huge area of functional dissonance, and given that it’s a 1.0 implementation in Windows 8, there are clearly plenty of things that need to be fixed. I’ll highlight some of the obvious ones here, but let me know what I missed.

(Note: With these kinds of suggestions, there’s always some well-intentioned soul who mentions that they like things just the way they are. That’s nice. But as is generally the case with these “Fixing Windows 8” suggestions, what I’m really asking for is choice. So you would be able to keep using Windows 8 in its current state if that’s what you want, thanks to more mature customization functionality.)

Snap

I’ve suggested this one in the past, but what the heck, it’s needed: Microsoft should allow the Start screen to be used in Snap mode so that it can sit on the side of the screen and be visible at all times, providing tile-based status updates from your favorite apps. I find it odd that the Start screen is the only Metro experience that can’t be snapped, since this is one of the few Metro experiences that actually makes sense in the constricted, thin Snap area.

Multiple tile sizes

With the more mature Windows Phone platform, Microsoft has evolved live tiles to support three native sizes, which we might think of as small, medium, and large. But Windows 8 only supports two, medium (square) and large. I’d like to see Windows 8 support up to four tile sizes for even more customization choices, including small (which, like medium would be square, and would be static only) and extra-large, which could provide a larger canvas for in-app information and be ideal for large screen desktop PCs and other devices.

Clock and other status information

Windows 8 is the only mobile environment I’m aware of that doesn’t offer a status/notification area at the top of the screen, and while one might make the argument that this bit of UI would clutter the currently-clean Metro app experiences, it’s a necessity on the Start screen. I shouldn’t have to tap WINKEY + C (or otherwise enable the Charms) to see the time, date, battery life, network connectivity, and other related information. And given how much free/wasted space there is on the Start screen, it’s not hard to image what this might look like. No brainer.

Note: Obviously, the status information could be located anywhere on screen. I’m not a designer.

Sleep/Shutdown/Restart

While I have no problem with Microsoft moving the power choices (Sleep, Shutdown, and Restart) to the Settings pane, these items are not really settings, and should be more readily available from the Start screen. The obvious place is in the menu that appears when you tap the user tile. Today, this menu includes options like Lock and Sign out. Why not Sleep, Shutdown, and Restart too?

Collapsible folders/groups

Windows 8 currently lets you organize Start screen tiles in visual groups which are segregated from each other and can be named. But when you pin a lot of tiles to the Start screen, you need to scroll off to the right to find what you’re looking for. To evolve this concept into something more usable, Microsoft should consider making these groups collapsible—a concept I wrote up some time ago—or just allow for tile “folders” that would open up in-place similar to iOS folders. More content in less space.

Anything else?

Discuss this Article 87

sbetz
on Jan 2, 2013

How about instead of "Collapsible folders/groups", add vertical scrolling to each group. "Group" columns could be set and adjustable in width, instead of automatically adding another column when tiles are added to a group. This makes more sense to me because with the current implementation, as your number of start screen apps grows, you have to scroll farther and farther left-right in order to navigate it all. I think this would reduce horizontal scrolling while giving the "group" feature more value.

Bryan
on Dec 23, 2012

Paul, a lot of what you suggest is common sense. As much as I like Windows 8/WindowsRT there are many things that have to be polished. Microsoft will ignore this at its own peril. They say a fish stinks from the head down, well in the case of Windows 8, SS is gone and there really should be thorough re-alignment to go with the re-imagining thing.

None of this is hard and with some tweaks Windows 8 and Windows RT could be several orders of magnitude more useful than they already are. As a starting point Fix and polish Mail, Calendar, Photos, Music and Video. I am sure that Microsoft is aware that these applications form the basis of what 90% of people want to do with their PC’s and Tablets.

Schools are now insisting that students (as early as Grade 7) have iPads as part of their school supplies. The University of Sydney is supplying iPads to all teachers and students for 2013. (http://www.uws.edu.au/learning_teaching/learning_and_teaching/ipad_initi...) Someone at Microsoft better take note of this before it becomes too late!!

WayneRobinson
on Dec 23, 2012

Great suggestions, Paul. All no-brainers. But... no folders, please. No folders.

navarac
on Dec 23, 2012

How about just adding File History and Storage Spaces to Windows 7? All the perceived problems of Metro on desktop PCs would be irrelevant. (Most of Metro is, as someone said above, a distraction.)

bob_the_rigger
on Dec 23, 2012

How about making the colour of the tiles follow the colour selected in the customize menu. So if I select blue the tiles go for a blue scheme with a darker blue, normal blue and light blue.
Something like this
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=dynamics+crm+metro&view=detail&id=6D...

alvatrus
on Dec 23, 2012

One improvement that I've been waiting for since Win95 (or so it seems) is to say good riddance to the scrollbar.
Why can fingers move the start-screen effortlessly back and forth, and the mouse can't do that? Why must I move up to scroll down? It is jarring and counter-intuitive. As I said, it's my pet-peeve since 1995.
Now is/was the chance to implement a new idiom for scrolling: grab the background with the mouse and just move it. Regardless of using the mouse or your finger. Missed opportunity.

Boots
on Dec 23, 2012

"Why must I move up to scroll down?"
When you move the scroll wheel UP, the page moves DOWN the screen, moving you UP to the top of the page. UP to go up, DOWN to go down.

Silversee
on Dec 23, 2012

Paul, to me one of the biggest improvements to the Start screen would be for Microsoft to add the Start Screen layout to synchronized settings.

Consider that on both Windows Phone and Windows 8/RT, the user can spend considerable time customizing and personalizing the experience, placing tiles in particular groups, sizing tiles in particular ways, naming groups, etc. This investment of time and energy is something that virtually nobody did with the old Start Menu, but is now almost mandatory to obtain a great experience with Windows. Yet this time and energy is lost if moving to a different machine.

I realize that not all devices one uses may have the same set of desktop apps installed, and so there may be some "missing" tiles. But the collection installed of Windows Store apps could easily be included in the synchronization settings, and apps automatically downloaded for you when setting up a new device.

Perhaps most consumers only use one computer, but for those of us who do switch between machines frequently, the need to manage the Start Screen separately on each device quickly becomes a chore. In fact, this personalization feature is so obvious to me, I can't really understand why Microsoft didn't think to do this out the gate.

neonspark
on Dec 23, 2012

what's depressing is that so many of these things are obvious to everybody EXCEPT Microsoft. who are these people hiring that don't have a clue!!

wss
on Dec 23, 2012

It makes me wonder what prevents those billions of dollars finding true expertise and even common sense. You got the money, you get the best, doesn't it work that way?

Microsoft should hire all the people with ideas it finds online or who contact it.

Pit those people against the official design team and see whose arguments and designs win. It would be no contest. And it would cost it next to nothing.

trooper11
on Dec 23, 2012

This is the best fix article yet.

I think all of the suggestions are great and would go a long way to making power users feel more comfortable using Metro in a desktop (i.e. non touch) setting. As others have said, these are fairly obvious custimization options, so hopefully MS is evaluating all of these things as they push towards the first major update.

Some people wonder how MS didnt do these things from the start, but it seems pretty clear that they finished what they could finish in the time they had. Just as any OS has to start with a 1.0 release with many areas to improve, the metro side of Win 8 is no exception. It has to mature just like Android or iOS had to. I think it will happen faster then either of those two however, thanks to pressure from the competition and the experience they already have with WP8.

Boots
on Dec 23, 2012

Microsoft had over a year to fix these things. People have be making suggestions since the Developer Preview came out. Microsoft largely ignored them. Some of these suggestions should have been obvious to have in a 1.0 product.
iOS didn't have folders in version 1.0. Microsoft didn't need to make the same "mistakes".

dfey
on Dec 23, 2012

These are all ideas I heavily like and would really make the Win 8 experience "better" by large margins.

pmbAustin
on Dec 23, 2012

In addition to Start Screen Snap, the start screen should act like an app when task switching. When swiping in from the left, it should cycle through all apps AND the start screen. This would make more logical sense, as well as facilitate start screen snap.

Also, when mousing to the upper left corner, it can be thought of as taking you back to the last app you were using. Except if you only have one metro app running, NOTHING HAPPENS. This is confusing and inconsistent. If the "last" place you were at was the start screen, then you should be able to go back in this same, consistent way.

satkinsn
on Dec 23, 2012

I very much like the idea of being able to snap the start screen, but my Dell Lattitude D620, which is perfectly competent to run Win 8 in every other way, maxes out at a screen resolution of 1280 x 800. This is one area where I think Microsoft should be more flexible: there are a lot of still useful machines out there that can't do this one thing, which unfortunately makes them less than ideal candidates for Win 8.

Boots
on Dec 23, 2012

The start screen should have the option to change background images to any picture you like, not just the crappy built in ones. If your Desktop and Startscreen both had the same background, the switch between them would be less jarring.

The "All Apps" icon should be right on the Startscreen. Instead of being the only item hidden away in a right-click toolbar.

The Startscreen should have a Search field. It would be instantly obvious to every user, how, and where to go, to use search.

Darutto
on Dec 24, 2012

One thing I think was very important in the previous versions of windows was that it gave options to users to do whatever they wanted to their desktops, or icons for that matter.

The start screen is severely lacking in personalisation, e.g. you have only a handful of options to use. Also, the tiles are non-customizable... I would like to be able to change the colour or even the icon if I wanted to. Someone mentioned pinning folders to the start screen... what about having your own icons for your own folders, this kind of things was rather simple in the desktop and in the metro environment is gone.

Darutto
on Dec 24, 2012

This one might not be directly related with the start screen, however it kind of is part of the metro-world.

Allow two or more Metro-style browsers to live together in peace! I want IE10-metro and I also want chrome to be the default browser... at the moment I have to settle for one or the other :(

mikeg
on Dec 24, 2012

Recently opened programs should be the first 2 columns of items. Most pc users do not downs time organising thier pc, this would make windows self organise like the old start menu.

Other fixes needed are when on dual screen setup, have a metro app open on 1 screen, open start menu on screen 2... Guess what happens... It closes metro app on screen 1. So start menu opening closes all other modern apps... This is just very poor.

Blinckx
on Dec 24, 2012

All those improvements to Windows 8 I quite agree with. But I feel Microsoft should have made more efforts about a coherent marketing strategy for Windows as an integrated ecosystem. The Windows brand name should have taken center-stage.

Something like this:
Windows 8 Phone (for mobile phone platforms)
Windows 8 Surface (the touch only simplified Metro-style apps)
Windows 8 Signature (Surface enhanced with the classic desktop with separate boot-possibility for either UI)
Windows 8 Significant (Signature enhanced with the business and pro-user abilities)
Windows 8 Xbox (entertainment, media center, video, music, live television, internet streaming, social media, games)

Clue to this is that each and every system can interact. All apps and games must be available for all the other versions, either in a more sophisticated version. While the Surface Metro-style apps are locked in functionality and suffice for 80% of light-medium PC and devices users,

Signature must allow you to integrate functions, procedures, notifications at your own choice from routinely-used desktops applications (like Office) into the Metro-style "front/core" tile or app.

Signifant should integrate business options and their new multi-touch (or gesture) PixelSense technologies for more users on a touchscreen/device at the same time. Xbox capabilities should be available in all other Windows 8 platforms.

On the devices Microsoft should make leading technology in al of these classes. I branded these als 'Signum'-brand (a a lead/signal for the OEMs). This means Signum Windows 8 Phones, Signum Windows 8 Surface (7 and 10inch tablets en laptop-convertibles), Signum Windows 8 Signature devices (including ultrabook, all-in-one, compact-sized desktops) and Significant (workstations, servers). The Xbox of course already exists.

hellcatm
on Dec 25, 2012

I like what you said about having the snap menu for your favorite tiles but I'd like to add on it. I said this in the previous article and it could be added to your idea. By having a button at the bottom that slides up the tiles to reveal your open programs and apps. Right now in Windows Desktop you have the task bar which is great, but it only shows the open Windows programs. If you had the option of keeping the multi-tasking bar open and being able easily slide back and fourth between it and your favorite Tiles I think that would be really nice.

hellcatm
on Dec 25, 2012

I just thought of a way to do status info. You have the lock menu that has some status functions, just make it so you can pull that back down and there will be an overlay with more status info on it.

Basically what I'm saying is when you first start up your computer you have the regular push up lock menu that looks like it does now. When you're in Windows you just pull down that menu and it will (over the picture you have) have more of a status report available, then you can push it up again without having to add your password. Also on top of that there can be a lock button so if you walk away you can just pull down the status screen, press the lock button and it'll lock your screen. Or the when you press the button you can have the option to lock, restart, sleep or reboot.

zorb58
on Dec 25, 2012

Love all these as ideas well. I really hope the start screen is just getting started in Windows 8 "1.0."

dalestrauss
on Dec 26, 2012

Very well conceived and logical, and because you offered them up publicly they will NEVER see the light of day at Microsoft. Oh well... Let's add one more - a variable snap screen. With 1080p tablets, and huge 27" monitors, the snap screen should not be limited to 1/4 the total screen real estate. At least offer a 50/50 option - I know they'll never allow overlapping windows in Metro. By the way, maybe that should be the new name for Metro - Transoms (for those who are too young, i.e. most of you - the small rectangular quarter windows that opened above doorways - often indoors in offices).

I want credit when Microsoft starts using that name!

OrangeB
on Dec 26, 2012

I have begun suffering for RSI over the last few years. I have found the Win 8 interface to cause me extra discomfort as I have to move around my 23 inch screen so much more with the mouse pointer.

Ive never been good with keyboard shortcuts, but in the past I have never had to be, as everything only needed small mouse movements in the start menu to reach. One of the most difficult things for me is closing the metro apps as it involves so much arm movement.

I like the new Start Screen but it needs to make the basics easier, we shouldn't have to be moving the mouse back and forth across the screen. I really hope MS fix this because i dont know what to do.

JimP
on Dec 27, 2012

How about the ability to have the same background/wallpaper for Desktop and Metro? One of the issues with Windows 8 is the disjointed UX between these two modes. Something as simple as having the same background might make switching between the two modes not so disconcerting.

corgalore
on Dec 28, 2012

I agree with all of these suggestions. I would love to see all of these implemented. Seeing live tile updates in a snapped sidebar = awesome. Placing the date and time on the start screen without swiping is a must.

pchase
on Dec 29, 2012

Found a very helpful app @

http://winaero.com/download.php?view.33

WinAero Skip Metro Suite. Does the trick. You can still access the charms/apps via keyboard shortcuts.

Jax
on Dec 30, 2012

I wish the Start Screen and Metro apps would consistently accept the navigation input from Xbox controllers and Media Center remotes.

For some reason, Start/Metro doesn’t always recognize the directional pad/back/OK input the same way they do arrow keys/backsp/Enter. I realize this would not necessarily enable all features on all apps, but it would help a quite a bit.

These input devices on Windows PCs may not be the norm, but it certainly helps use Win8 on a big screen TV (and Metro apps kinda make sense when sitting 10 feet from a TV).

Jax
on Dec 30, 2012

I wish Metro apps would consistently accept the navigation input from Xbox controllers and Media Center remotes. For some reason, they don’t always recognize the directional pad input (including Back/Enter) the same way they do arrow keys. These devices on Windows PCs may not be the norm, but it certainly helps use Win8 on a big screen TV (and Metro apps kinda make sense when sitting 10 feet from a TV).

milky_cereal
on Jan 2, 2013

All great recommendations! And I saw a lot of others in the comments that make a lot of sense too. Let's hope that MS notices these shortcomings and continually improves things. As a mouse only user on my desktop, some of the things are so undiscoverable and difficult to access from a mouse, but make a lot of sense with touch.

Another thing. When you mouse over something, it should realize you have a mouse and provide the proper hover cues that mouse users are used to. Right now, if you move your mouse around Metro, you have no idea what is clickable and what is not. That works for touch, but not for the mouse.

sharpsone
on Jan 3, 2013

One of my gripes is with pinned apps. After doing so the 80% portion goes blank, Why? To launch a 2nd app I have to return to the start screen which takes 100% of the display. Why doesn't it operate from the 80% split? This way I wouldn't lose access to my pinned app.

eboyhan
on Jan 5, 2013

I sort of agree with most of your suggestions for fixing W8 in posts 1,2,3 -- but I might do the implementation in a more parsimonious fashion. I don't like the grey bar for your boot to desktop. Instead I like your suggestion from #1 about the app bar/ellipsis notion from win Ph 8. I would put an ellipsis on the lower right of the start screen. When popped, it should have the shutdown/sleep/restart selections, a help/tutorial/about choice, a goto desktop option, and a start screen settings/properties button that could be used to configure the start screen, implement auto goto desktop, start screen snap, etc

I like the idea of the ellipsis as a generalized more/settings/properties interface that could work in all contexts (not just the start screen) -- not unlike how right click works on current Windows versions. Perhaps there is/could also be a unique touch gesture that would always do the same as clicking/touching the ellipsis?

eboyhan
on Jan 5, 2013

I also wonder if the collapsible folder notion couldn't be implemented as an app? This app -- in my mind it would be an active tile container app -- would create an active tile on the start screen to which other active tiles could be added. The container tile could be named, and perhaps could itself be active? Cycling through the tiles it contains? It could even contain other container tiles -- implementing nested hierarchies of tiles for those who like to organize things that way.

This has the advantage of not putting additional stuff into the OS. I'm not sure whether all the necessary syntactic sugar exists in the winrt API to implement this? I would like the "fixing" of W8 to leverage to the maximum extent possible apps rather than changes to the OS core.

tskjaerpe
on Jan 10, 2013

I agree with most of the suggestions in the article and comments sections. For me the most important change would be being able to group apps into folders. With 200+ tiles I am loosing control. Unintentionally, the tiles seem to change their locations. As was commented above, trying to arrange columns, tiles spill over to the next column or pushes tiles within the column to unwanted places. How I would love to have most tiles in folders called 'Office Programs', 'Photo and Video', 'system tools', 'Student lectures', 'News', 'Social', etc.

red77star
on Jan 10, 2013

Metro Screen reminds of www.microsoft.com. Makes me puke when i see it. When i go to www.microsoft.com on my 27" i always think my screen is zoomed. Against all UI principles. Guess what, i used to regularly visit their web site, don't go there anymore.

Brian49
on May 10, 2013

MS should use uservoice.com for all products; they have done it for some groups who actually care about feedback. They should also "advertise" this on all their web pages and in the help menus. Right now there is no centralized location to give feedback and see how other people feel about it and how the teams working on the programs feel about it. MS has done this for Visual Studio and Windows Phone. It should be done for everything and should also include a mechanism to allow people to acknowledge ideas for power users vs ideas to simplify the common man scenario.

MS framed the Start menu as revolutionary. They should have called it evolutionary by doing the items I mention in 1). This would have made the start screen not such of a jolt (which is what caused most of the backlash) and frame the full screen nature as just giving you more space to see your organized apps. In WinXP they all programs fly out could be big, but you could easily group things and organize it and not have to scroll. In Vista and Win7, they went backwards for power users, because if you had a lot of apps, then you ended up scrolling a lot which stinks from my perspective (or using the search which was a great idea, but only if you know roughly the name of the app you want to use, not so great for mom/dad scenario).

Other ideas I would like to see are

1) On the start screen I would like the option to add a few pre canned groups to correspond to the parts of the start menu they "threw away". I would like to see a MRU program group (and be able to set how many of these show up). I know that it is on the all programs screen, but it should be on the start menu. Another group would be the 2nd column of the start menu.

2) Have a Flyout (right hand side) or something on a start menu item to show MRU documents. This is a huge issue for my wife. We really liked this feature in Win7, but you can't get it unless you pin things to the taskbar and the taskbar space is a valuable resource which I talk about in another item.

3) Paul's idea of folders or collapsing groups is probably my #1 issue with Win8. I download a ton of apps out of the store to try out apps and also to get multiple items in same categories to meet different needs. To organize these and run these are extremely painful because you spend so much time swiping. This is also related to my issue that when you close an app you should end up at the same place in the start menu which I talk about below.

4) When organizing icons (similar to iPad mode), you should be able see a small image of the whole start screen so you can easily drag something from the end of the start screen (because it was just purchased) to a group toward the beginning of the start menu. This will be a huge usability issue as people get more apps. The iPad does not do this well, it is more painful than it should be to move an icon from 1 desktop to another.

5) They should allow something like what was done by StarDock in Modern Mix. This is a good idea for someone who has a desktop/laptop machine or someone who multiple monitors. Stardock in general has quite a few ideas which are good (and I have purchased) which should just be part of the stock OS. MS has tried to dumb down the OS at the expense of power users.

6) Multiple Start Screens: Have a "kid’s corner" start screen without having to log on as another user. When my kids are using my tablet, it would be nice to go to another start menu which only has the games or apps for them. You could do this in a swipe up from the current start menu. This concept could be applied to other things such as you want a start screen for different times of day or different activities (such as reading news apps or programming or internet shortcuts). This would give a 2-d effect to the start menu (swipe up/down for different start screens and right to left for start screens) and allow for things more like desktops in iPads/Android, but really superior because you have much more control. You should be able to set which is your default desktop very easily. So you can easily set the kids start menu as default before you hand it to your kids.

7) When you exit a Metro app I would like to be taken back to the same place on the start menu where it was launched from. It is a pain you are taken back to the beginning of the start menu (this is also a problem in the Windows Phone). Imagine if you are reading news apps and you are done and swipe down to close, so you can you can look at another news app in the same group, but you are jarred back to the beginning of the start menu and have to swipe, swipe... back to the same location. This is jarring and distracting. This applies to games as well, if they get accidentally closed by a swipe. This is a common occurrence when I let my younger children play games and they get focused on the game and forget about not hitting the edge of the game. The most prominent example is Fruit Ninja, they should be focusing on the game and not “don’t swipe across the whole screen”.

7a) Digression to Windows Phone. MS has refused to put a lock on videos/games to prevent them from being exited. This is very annoying. They have improved this situation some, but they will not take the same steps as Android to allow you to “temporarily” lock the screen when in an app. I like to use my phone at the gym or walking to watch training videos, but it is too easy to jump out of a video. This one issue is so large that I am considering a S4 instead of a 920.

8) Be able to have apps show up more than once on the start menu. So you can organize your groups the way you want them. You have always been able to do this in the past by just copying icons in the start menu. This can create a bigger start menu, but it allows you to organize it the way you want and feels natural for you.

9) You should also have short cut gestures (like multi finger swipes) to get to one end or the other of the start menu.

10) Be able to disable certain swipe gestures and these should not be buried in settings, but raised up pretty high because you might want to only shut off certain ones when kids are using them.

11) Acknowledge that there might be more advanced things you can do with a keyboard/mouse than you can do with gestures. For instance there might be some advanced organizing you can only do with a keyboard and mouse, and that’s ok. The type of user who wants to do the advanced things is either sitting at a laptop/desktop or has a kb/mouse for his/her tablet.

12) Be able to fit more icons vertically. For a 1366x768 screen you max out at 4 rows. I would like to be able to make the icons x% smaller (like you can do with resolution) and have the option to customize the size of the white space at the top and bottom.

13) I would like to see window store apps (Metro) support 1024x600 to support the abundance of Netbooks people have laying around. Win8 should run better than Win7 on these machines, since they optimized the core for speed. I know there is a hack, but that is ugly to have to do.

I also have a couple of ideas for the TaskBar/Windows in general which have irritated me the most:
14) Be able to have more items on your taskbar. In Win8, no matter how wide your taskbar is sized you only get one row/col depending on where it is docked. I am a power user and I often get the scroll bar which is very difficult from a usability perspective because it is small and at the end of the apps and you have to keep switching or organize/pin items. It might be nice to be able to switch rows/columns by hovering over the taskbar and using the wheel, but this does not fix the touch issue for tablets, it would be better to have multiple rows/columns. MS has to remember that the optimal location of a taskbar is really at the left or right edge because of the wide screen displays. Taking up real estate on the left or right does not impact how much of a web page/word doc/program you can see as much as having it at the top or bottom.

15) Be able to undock toolbars which you open on the taskbar and be able to pin these to other edges. This was lost in Vista. This ties in with the real estate issue which I mentioned above.

16) Create a decent search app like FileLocator Lite built in. All the "natural language" stuff is harder to remember than just filling out a few boxes and hitting start.

17) MS has to stop implying that desktop apps are 2nd class citizens and they will kill the desktop someday. They have not explicitly said it, but the silence speaks volumes. My opinion is that as the users become more comfortable to Metro Apps, they will start wanting the Stardock ModernMix approach.

If you think about it, Windows 8 is like Windows 1 where you could not have overlapping windows, wow think about that for a second. Then put in the idea that you could really run only 1 app at a time and task switch between them. That is like going back to Dos and being forced to using a memory manager which I used so long ago I can’t even remember the name. Does MS really think users are going to be happy long term with this approach? Things cycle, pendulums swing. How many times have we argued about centralized/thin clients vs distributed computing/thick client machines and all the things in between? Computer/tablets get faster with better battery life and MS needs to be at the forefront of raising the bar or Google will do it for them.

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