Surface Tip: Make the Desktop More Touch-Friendly

The desktop doesn't have to be a painful experience for Surface users

While moving between the Metro environment and the desktop can be a bit jarring on any PC, the Surface’s small screen and relatively low resolution makes the desktop even harder to use. But you don’t need to suffer: A couple of simple configuration changes will make the desktop environment more touch-friendly.

The issue here is simple enough: While the Start screen and other Metro experiences were designed for multi-touch, the desktop was not. And in File Explorer and other areas, there are onscreen items that are simply too small to easy select with a finger.

While the desktop will never be truly ideal for touch, it can certainly be made to work better. And if you’re interacting with Surface primarily via touch, I have a few suggestions for making it so.

First, tap and hold on a blank area of the desktop and choose Personalize from the menu that appears. (Yes, it will be a bit tough this first time.) In the Personalization control panel that appears, tap the Display link in the lower left corner of the window. This brings up the Display control panel.

Both of the major functional areas here are useful to Surface owners.

In the top area, change the size of all items from Smaller to Medium (125 percent). Click Apply and sign out so the change can take effect. When you sign back in and return to the desktop, you can see the difference this one change makes, and even those tiny entries in the File Explorer navigation pane are easier to tap now.

Return to the Display control panel to examine the rest of this interface. In the bottom part of the window, you can increase the size of controls in Windows that include text—title bars, menus, message boxes, palette titles, icons, and tooltips—and do so on a control-by-control basis. I recommend bumping the size of the text of each item to at least 11 points for a more touch-friendly interface. (Some controls will already be this size.)

Another useful configuration change is to make sure that all File Explorer, Control Panel, and desktop applications display full-screen and not in windowed mode.

There are two reasons for this change. One, it will help in application switching as you move between Metro-style experiences, which are pretty much always full-screen, and desktop applications and windows. And two, physically rotating the Surface display causes onscreen elements to rotate as well, and floating desktop windows are often resized in unhelpful ways during rotation. By keeping these windows full-screen, rotation will no longer ruin your window sizes or positions.

Do you have any other tips or suggestions for making the desktop more touch-friendly? Let me know!

Discuss this Article 18

cornholio
on Nov 26, 2012

just curious, will these changes also apply to your Win8 PC if you use your Live ID for both?

pthurrott
on Nov 26, 2012

Great question. They do not.

abw1987
on Nov 26, 2012

No, they don't. I have enlarged the items on my HTPC, but not on my desktop PC. They share the same Microsoft account, but they each retain their own display settings.

I think this is also true of the Start Screen Tile sizes.

techsavvy
on Nov 26, 2012

See, that's the difference between the iPad and the Surface. On the iPad, you don't need "configure" parts of it to make the Touch work properly across different applications -- it comes that way out of the box.

Microsoft would have done well to better optimize the desktop experience for touch. They could have (going on your suggestions)

* emphasized / defaulted to full screen windows
* proportionally made controls larter (x's, other controls, toolbars)

I haven't seen a surface, but does it require double-tapping behavior?

(One of the great pleasures of the iPad is that you never need to double-tap; double-clicking was perhaps the most awkward behavior, which was simply not fully graspable by older workers).

Sent
on Nov 26, 2012

You don't need to double tap anything on the Surface if you only use Metro apps. Which is great and entirely equivalent to using the iPad apart from not having as many apps. But the real strength of the Surface comes with it's native abilities to join a network, edit real documents, even print natively, all of which is enabled by the inclusion of the desktop. So maybe we have to configure it a little to use with fingers; big deal. The iPad doesn't provide any of the functions of OS X to network, print or edit, among others.

Justin M Salvato
on Nov 26, 2012

Is this techsavvy person... serious?

GoodThings2Life
on Nov 26, 2012

I know it's a foreign concept to Apple fanatics, but this is precisely the opposite of what *I* want. I want control, flexibility, and options to decide what makes the UI work for ME... not make me work for the UI.

And what you're describing is already true for the Metro environment. This fix is EXCLUSIVELY for the Desktop environment.

ninja
on Nov 26, 2012

No, you got it wrong. The point is iPad simply does not have a mouse friendly desktop that can open dozens of windows and run desktop grade applications like Office.

If you want to compare iPad, then stick to the start screen which is much more powerful and better than iPad for touch.

Silversee
on Nov 26, 2012

Except that the iPad is not designed to allow multiple windowed applications to run at once, dock to large desktop displays, connect to network shares, or do any of the myriad other things that a Surface RT can do because it's a Windows device.

Using touch with the desktop mode in Surface is *optional*, not required. This might be a detriment *to you*, but many Surface owners likely bought the machine precisely because it has some PC capabilities and can run Office.

Edit: this was meant to be a reply to "techsavvy".

EvoFx Studio
on Nov 26, 2012

Paul please wacth this video about microsoft
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=cALUOxM4akE#!

other user voise on there products

kanderson
on Nov 26, 2012

I'm confused as to why this would be beneficial to anyone other than rabid Apple fans?

GoodThings2Life
on Nov 26, 2012

Paul... my only concern to raise for this particular tip is that changing to 125% also changes the default zoom state in IE, and I've seen that have an effect on web site layouts. Facebook comes to mind, since the chat bar only shows up when the page can be seen at "100%" without scrolling... on the other hand, Facebook in general needs bigger fonts, so not always a bad thing, right?

Anyway, with that in mind, I personally prefer to ONLY alter the font sizes for menu items, etc.

IanYates82
on Nov 26, 2012

I have a Motion J3500 (very rugged, large and heavy) tablet from 2010 - it runs Win 8 great except for the screen res not being enough for Metro snap - it's only 1280 wide.

Anyway, when all we had was Windows 7 on there the single biggest help was to make the scroll bars wider. I didn't see you mention that in the article. I don't have a Win 8 machine next to me at the moment (yet to update my work machine) but in Windows 7 you could get to the trusty old "Window Color and Appearance" dialog via

Personalisation -> "Window Colour" (at the bottom) -> "Advanced Appearance Settings"

From there you can choose "Scrollbar" in the item dropdown and set the size to be about twice what you'd normally have it :)

Jack
on Nov 27, 2012

Change the default View in File Explorer to "Content", should be much easier to tap than "Details".

pthurrott
on Nov 27, 2012

Nice one!

ElJefitoDos
on Dec 3, 2012

Yes, this would be useful, I can see that. But, how do you set the default view in File Explorer? I bet it's simple, but I can't see how to do it. Thanks.

ElJefitoDos
on Dec 5, 2012

Okay, it was simple. With File Explorer running, click the View tab. Click Content. Then, way over to the right, click Options to get the drop-down menu leading to "Folder Options". Click the View tab. At the top, under Folder views, click "Apply to Folders". That should do it. (Love my Surface RT.)

tboggs13
on Nov 27, 2012

I have been tweaking the display setting to 125% since Vista due to my vision. I like having higher resolutions, but making the gui elements bigger to compensate.

When we purchased our first Windows 7 touch screen all in one for a conference room at work, the first things I did was bump this up to 125%. The difference in usability is quite amazing. I could not understand why these devices were not shipped this way by default.

Until I tried to implement the setting for all users. The setting has to be applied at the time of image creation and can not be pushed via group policy.

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